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Wikipedia

Social Security (United States)

In the United States, Social Security is the commonly used term for the federal Old-Age, Survivors, and Disability Insurance (OASDI) program and is administered by the Social Security Administration (SSA).[1] The original Social Security Act was enacted in 1935,[2] and the current version of the Act, as amended,[3] encompasses several social welfare and social insurance programs.

Private sector workers to social benefits recipient   Disability recipients
  Survivors benefits
  Retired Social Security

The average monthly Social Security benefit for November 2022 was $1,551.[4] The total cost of the Social Security program for the year 2021 was $1.145 trillion or about 5 percent of U.S. GDP.[5]

Social Security is funded primarily through payroll taxes called Federal Insurance Contributions Act (FICA) or Self Employed Contributions Act (SECA). Wage and salary earnings in covered employment, up to an amount specifically determined by law (see tax rate table below), are subject to the Social Security payroll tax. Wage and salary earnings above this amount are not taxed. In 2022, the maximum amount of taxable earnings is $147,000.[6]

Social Security is nearly universal, with 94 percent of individuals in paid employment in the United States working in covered employment.[7] However, about 6.6 million state and local government workers in the United States, or 28 percent of all state and local workers, are not covered by Social Security but rather pension plans operated at the state or local level.

Social Security payroll taxes are collected by the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) and are formally entrusted to the Federal Old-Age and Survivors Insurance (OASI) Trust Fund and the Federal Disability Insurance (DI) Trust Fund, the two Social Security Trust Funds.[8][9] Social Security revenues exceeded expenditures between 1983 and 2009[10] which increased trust fund balances. The retirement of the large baby-boom generation, however, will lower balances. Without legislative changes, trust fund reserves are projected to be depleted in the years 2034 and 2065 for the OASI and DI funds, respectively.[11] Should depletion occur, incoming payroll tax and other revenue would only be sufficient to pay 76 percent of OASI benefits starting in 2035 and 92 percent of DI benefits starting in 2065.

With few exceptions, all legal residents working in the United States now have an individual Social Security Number.

History

Historical Social Security Tax Rates
Maximum Salary FICA or SECA taxes paid on
Year
Maximum
Earnings
taxed
OASDI
Tax rate
Medicare
Tax Rate
Year
Maximum
Earnings
taxed
OASDI
Tax rate
Medicare
Tax Rate
1937 3,000 2% 1978 17,700 10.1% 2.0%
1938 3,000 2% 1979 22,900 10.16% 2.1%
1939 3,000 2% 1980 25,900 10.16% 2.1%
1940 3,000 2% 1981 29,700 10.7% 2.6%
1941 3,000 2% 1982 32,400 10.8% 2.6%
1942 3,000 2% 1983 35,700 10.8% 2.6%
1943 3,000 2% 1984 37,800 11.4% 2.6%
1944 3,000 2% 1985 39,600 11.4% 2.7%
1945 3,000 2% 1986 42,000 11.4% 2.9%
1946 3,000 2% 1987 43,800 11.4% 2.9%
1947 3,000 2% 1988 45,000 12.12% 2.9%
1948 3,000 2% 1989 48,000 12.12% 2.9%
1949 3,000 2% 1990 51,300 12.4% 2.9%
1950 3,000 3% 1991 53,400 12.4% 2.9%
1951 3,600 3% 1992 55,500 12.4% 2.9%
1952 3,600 3% 1993 57,600 12.4% 2.9%
1953 3,600 3% 1994 60,600 12.4% 2.9%
1954 3,600 4% 1995 61,200 12.4% 2.9%
1955 4,200 4% 1996 62,700 12.4% 2.9%
1956 4,200 4% 1997 65,400 12.4% 2.9%
1957 4,200 4.5% 1998 68,400 12.4% 2.9%
1958 4,200 4.5% 1999 72,600 12.4% 2.9%
1959 4,800 5% 2000 76,200 12.4% 2.9%
1960 4,800 6% 2001 80,400 12.4% 2.9%
1961 4,800 6% 2002 84,900 12.4% 2.9%
1962 4,800 6.25% 2003 87,000 12.4% 2.9%
1963 4,800 7.25% 2004 87,900 12.4% 2.9%
1964 4,800 7.25% 2005 90,000 12.4% 2.9%
1965 4,800 7.25% 2006 94,200 12.4% 2.9%
1966 6,600 7.7% 0.7% 2007 97,500 12.4% 2.9%
1967 6,600 7.8% 1.0% 2008 102,000 12.4% 2.9%
1968 7,800 7.6% 1.2% 2009 106,800 12.4% 2.9%
1969 7,800 8.4% 1.2% 2010 106,800 12.4% 2.9%
1970 7,800 8.4% 1.2% 2011 106,800 10.4% 2.9%
1971 7,800 9.2% 1.2% 2012 110,100 10.4% 2.9%
1972 9,000 9.2% 1.2% 2013 113,700 12.4% 2.9%
1973 10,800 9.7% 2.0% 2014 117,000 12.4% 2.9%
1974 13,200 9.9% 1.8% 2015 118,500 12.4% 2.9%
1975 14,100 9.9% 1.8% 2016 118,500 12.4% 2.9%
1976 15,300 9.9% 1.8% 2017 127,200 12.4% 2.9%
1977 16,500 9.9% 1.8% 2018 128,400 12.4% 2.9%
Notes: Tax rate is the sum of the OASDI and Medicare rate for employers and workers.
In 2011 and 2012, the OASDI tax rate on workers was set temporarily to 4.2%
while the employers OASDI rate remained at 6.2% giving 10.4% total rate.
Medicare taxes of 2.9% now (2013) have no taxable income ceiling.
Sources: Social Security Administration[12][13]

Social Security timeline[14]

  • 1935 The 37-page Social Security Act signed August 14 by President Franklin D. Roosevelt. The legislation included Unemployment Insurance, Aid to Dependent Children, Old Age Insurance (OAI), and Old Age Assistance (OAA). The old age insurance program gradually developed into the Old Age Survivors and Disability Insurance program, which is what Americans typically associate "Social Security" with.[15]
  • 1936 The new Social Security Board contracts the Post Office Department in late November to distribute and collect applications.
  • 1937 More than twenty million Social Security Cards issued. Ernest Ackerman receives first lump-sum payout (17 cents) in January.[16]
  • 1939 Two new categories of beneficiaries added: spouse and minor children of a retired worker
  • 1940 First monthly benefit check issued to Ida May Fuller for $22.54
  • 1950 Benefits increased and cost of living adjustments (COLAs) made at irregular intervals – 77% COLA in 1950
  • 1954 Disability program added to Social Security
  • 1960 Flemming v. Nestor. Landmark U.S. Supreme Court ruling that affirmed that Congress has the power to amend and revise the schedule of benefits. The Court also ruled that recipients have no contractual right to receive payments.
  • 1961 Early retirement age lowered to age 62 at reduced benefits
  • 1965 Medicare health care benefits added to Social security – twenty million joined in three years
  • 1966 Medicare tax of 0.7% added to pay for increased Medicare expenses
  • 1972 Supplemental Security Income (SSI) program federalized and assigned to Social Security Administration
  • 1975 Automatic cost of living adjustments (COLAs) mandated
  • 1977 COLA adjustments brought back to "sustainable" levels
  • 1980 Amendments are made in disability program to help solve some problems of fraud
  • 1983 Taxation of Social Security benefits introduced, new federal hires required to be under Social Security, retirement age increased for younger workers to 66 and 67 years
  • 1984 Congress passed the Disability Benefits Reform Act modifying several aspects of the disability program
  • 1996 Drug addiction or alcoholism disability benefits could no longer be eligible for disability benefits. The Earnings limit doubled exemption amount for retired Social Security beneficiaries. Terminated SSI eligibility for most non-citizens
  • 1997 The law requires the establishment of federal standards for state-issued birth certificates and requires SSA to develop a prototype counterfeit-resistant Social Security card – still being worked on.
  • 1997 Temporary Assistance for Needy Families, (TANF), replaces Aid to Families with Dependent Children (AFDC) program placed under SSA
  • 1997 State Children's Health Insurance Program for low income citizens – SCHIP added to Social Security Administration
  • 2003 Voluntary drug benefits with supplemental Medicare insurance payments from recipients added
  • 2009 No Social Security Benefits for Prisoners Act of 2009 signed.

A limited form of the Social Security program began, during President Franklin D. Roosevelt's first term, as a measure to implement "social insurance" during the Great Depression of the 1930s.[17] The Act was an attempt to limit unforeseen and unprepared-for dangers in modern life, including old age, disability, poverty, unemployment, and the burdens of widow(er)s with and without children.

Opponents, however, decried the proposal as socialism.[18][19][20] In a Senate Finance Committee hearing, Senator Thomas Gore (D-OK) asked Secretary of Labor Frances Perkins, "Isn't this socialism?" She said it was not, but he continued, "Isn't this a teeny-weeny bit of socialism?"[21]

The provisions of Social Security have been changing since the 1930s, shifting in response to economic worries as well as coverage for the poor, dependent children, spouses, survivors and the disabled.[22] By 1950, debates moved away from which occupational groups should be included to get enough taxpayers to fund Social Security to how to provide more benefits.[23] Changes in Social Security have reflected a balance between promoting "equality" and efforts to provide "adequate" and affordable protection for low wage workers.[24]

Major programs

The larger and better known programs under the Social Security Act are:

The Social Security Administration (SSA) administers two of these programs (OASDI and SSI).

Benefits

Benefit types

The Social Security program in the United States pays benefits to three broad categories of individuals: retired individuals and some family members, disabled persons and some family members, and survivors. Within these broad categories, the program defines more specific types of beneficiaries. For example, spouses and divorced spouses are distinct categories, with somewhat different eligibility requirements. Survivor benefits include several categories including aged widow(er)s, aged surviving divorced spouses, disabled widow(er)s, disabled surviving divorced spouses, paternal and maternal orphans, and widow(er)s caring for minor or disabled children.

As of 2020, there were about 65 million individuals receiving Social Security benefits.[25] Individuals receiving Retirement Insurance Benefits constitute the largest group of beneficiaries, with 49.3 million retired workers or family members receiving monthly payments. Social Security Disability Insurance benefits were paid to 8.2 million disabled workers and 1.5 million dependents (children and spouses). About 5.9 million individuals, including 1.9 million children, received some type of survivor benefit from Social Security.

Some individuals qualify for more than one type of benefit, but program rules on dual entitlement generally prevent the payment of two full benefits. For example, a person eligible for a retirement benefit and a higher spouse benefit will receive the full retirement benefit and a partial spouse benefit. The dual entitlement rules disproportionately affect women (6.9 million women in 2019[26]) because historically they have earned less than current or former husbands and this leads to retirement benefits for women that are often lower than the full spouse benefit for which they qualify.

In addition, Social Security beneficiaries with low income and limited resources may qualify for additional income through the Supplemental Security Income (SSI) program. SSI is separate from the Social Security program, but it is administered by SSA. In 2020, 2.7 million Social Security beneficiaries received additional income through SSI.[27]

System financing

Social Security payments to beneficiaries, which totaled $1.05 trillion in 2019, are generally financed by payroll taxes on workers in Social Security covered employment, trust fund reserves, and some income taxation of Social Security benefits. The payroll tax rate totals 12.4 percent of earnings up to the taxable maximum (the rate is 6.2 percent from workers and 6.2 percent from employers and 12.4 percent from the self-employed).

The OASI Trust Fund and the DI Trust Fund are legally separate. For employees and employers combined, the OASI payroll taxes are 10.6 percent and the DI payroll taxes are 1.8 percent. In 2019, trust fund reserves for the OASI and DI programs were $2.8 trillion and $93 billion, respectively. Income taxation of some Social Security benefits brought in $34.9 billion for OASI and $1.6 billion for DI in 2019.[11]

Assessments of system financing often focus on the combined programs together (OASI and DI) and focus on key measures such as trust fund depletion date, actuarial balance over a 75 year period, and comparisons of program costs to U.S. GDP.

Regarding trust fund depletion, the Social Security Trustees, based on technical work by the Social Security Administration's actuaries, project the combined OASDI trust fund will be depleted in 2035.[11] The Penn Wharton Budget Model (University of Pennsylvania) projects depletion in 2032-2034, depending on the shape of the economic recovery in the U.S. following the COVID-19 pandemic.[28]

With regard to actuarial balance, the Social Security Trustees estimate a 75-year actuarial deficit of 3.21 percent of payroll. This is approximately the total payroll tax increase that would be necessary to keep the system solvent for 75 years. The figure is designed to illustrate the size of the deficit. Legislation could close the deficit in ways other than raising the payroll tax rate.

Because taxable earnings are a fraction of GDP, sometimes the system's finances are put into context by using GDP. Social Security's cost are currently 5.0 percent of U.S. GDP. Program costs will rise to 5.9 percent of GDP by 2038 and will, approximately, remain at that level through 2094.[11]

In the past, legislation has been enacted to prevent trust fund depletion. Should the trust funds be depleted, Social Security would still have revenue coming into the system from payroll taxes. The Social Security trustees estimate that revenue would be sufficient to pay 79 percent of the program's benefits. There has been debate about a trust fund depletion scenario, however, regarding whether monthly benefits would be lowered or whether full amounts would be paid but not on a timely basis.[29]

The amount of the monthly Social Security benefit to which a worker is entitled currently depends upon the earnings record they have paid FICA or SECA taxes on and upon the age at which the retiree chooses to begin receiving benefits. That said, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in Flemming v. Nestor (1960) that no one has a contractual right to Social Security benefits.

Medicare is a separate program from Social Security, although disabled and aged (65 or older) Social Security beneficiaries qualify for Medicare. The financing for Medicare (United States) is also based on payroll taxes, trust fund reserves, and the taxation of some Social Security benefits.

Total benefits paid, by year

 
 
 
Year Beneficiaries Dollars[30]
1937 53,236 $1,278,000
1938 213,670 $10,478,000
1939 174,839 $13,896,000
1940 222,488 $35,000,000
1950 3,477,243 $961,000,000
1960 14,844,589 $11,245,000,000
1970 26,228,629 $31,863,000,000
1980 35,584,955 $120,511,000,000
1990 39,832,125 $247,796,000,000
1995 43,387,259 $332,553,000,000
1996 43,736,836 $347,088,000,000
1997 43,971,086 $361,970,000,000
1998 44,245,731 $374,990,000,000
1999 44,595,624 $385,768,000,000
2000 45,414,794 $407,644,000,000
2001 45,877,506 $431,949,000,000
2002 46,444,317 $453,746,000,000
2003 47,038,486 $470,778,000,000
2004 47,687,693 $493,263,000,000
2005 48,434,436 $520,748,000,000
2006 49,122,624 $546,238,000,000
2007 49,864,838 $584,939,000,000
2008 50,898,244 $615,344,000,000
2009 52,522,819 $675,482,000,000
2010 54,031,968 $701,609,000,000
2011 55,404,480 $725,103,000,000
2012 56,758,185 $774,791,000,000
2013 57,978,610 $812,259,000,000
2014 59,007,158 $848,463,000,000
2015 60,907,307 $886,278,000,000
2016 60,907,307 $911,384,000,000
2017 61,903,360 $941,499,000,000
2018 62,906,222 $988,635,000,000
2019 64,064,496 $1,047,930,000,000

Primary Insurance Amount and Monthly Benefit Amount calculations

Workers in Social Security covered employment pay FICA (Federal Insurance Contributions Act) or SECA (Self Employed Contributions Act) taxes and earn quarters of coverage if earnings are above minimum amounts specified in the law. Workers with 40 quarters of coverage (QC) are "fully insured" and eligible for retirement benefits. Retirement benefit amounts depend upon the average of the person's highest 35 years of "adjusted" or "indexed" earnings. A person's payroll-taxable earnings from earlier years are adjusted for economy-wide wage growth, using the national average wage index (AWI), and then averaged.[31] If the worker has fewer than 35 years of covered earnings these non-contributory years are assigned zero earnings. The sum of the highest 35 years of adjusted or indexed earnings divided by 420 (35 years times 12 months per year) produces a person's Average Indexed Monthly Earnings or AIME.[31]

The AIME is then used to calculate the Primary Insurance Amount or PIA. For workers who turn 62 in 2021, the PIA computation formula is:

(a) 90 percent of the first $996 of average indexed monthly earnings, plus

(b) 32 percent of average indexed monthly earnings between $996 and $6,002, plus

(c) 15 percent of average indexed monthly earnings over $6,002[32]

For workers who turn 62 in the future, the 90, 32, and 15 percent factors in the computation formula will remain the same but the dollar amounts in the formula (called bend points) will increase by wage growth in the national economy, as measured by the AWI. Because the AIME and the PIA calculation incorporate the AWI, Social Security benefits are said to be wage indexed. Because wages typically grow faster than prices, the PIAs for workers turning 62 in the future will tend to be higher in real terms but similar relative to average earnings in the economy at the time age 62 is attained.

Monthly benefit amounts are based on the PIA. Once the PIA is computed, it is indexed for price inflation over time. Thus, Social Security monthly benefit amounts retain their purchasing power throughout a person's retirement years.

A worker who first starts receiving a retirement benefit at the full retirement age receives a monthly benefit amount equal to 100 percent of the PIA. A worker who claims the retirement benefit before the full retirement age receives a reduced monthly benefit amount and a worker who claims at an age after the full retirement age (up to age 70) receives an increased monthly amount.[33]

The 90, 32, and 15 percent factors in the PIA computation lead to higher replacement rates for persons with lower career earnings. For example, a retired individual whose average earnings are below the first bend point can receive a monthly benefit at the full retirement age that equals 90 percent of the person's average monthly earnings before retirement. The table shows replacement rates for workers who turned 62 in 2013.

Benefit Calculations
Social Security Benefits vs. 35-year "Averaged" Salary
Percent of Average Indexed Monthly salary (AIME) Earnings Salary eligible for in Social Security, PIA, Benefits[34]

AIME Salary
per month
Single
Benefits
Married
Benefits*
Single
Benefits
at age 62
Married
Benefits*
at age 62
$ 791 90% 135% 68% 101%
$ 1,000 78% 117% 58% 88%
$ 2,000 55% 82% 41% 62%
$ 3,000 47% 71% 35% 53%
$ 4,000 43% 65% 33% 49%
$ 5,000 40% 60% 30% 45%
$ 6,000 36% 54% 27% 41%
$ 7,000 33% 50% 25% 32%
$ 8,000 31% 46% 23% 35%
$ 9,000 29% 44% 22% 33%
$ 10,000 28% 42% 21% 31%
$ 11,000 23% 34% 17% 26%
$ 12,000 21% 32% 16% 24%
$ 13,000 19% 29% 15% 22%
* Married spousal benefits may be reduced or eliminated if spouse
receiving a government pension. Spouse still eligible for Medicare.[35]
Maximum percent of salary received before Medicare or tax deductions.
Retirement benefits are calculated at full retirement ages.
Age 62 retirement benefits are assumed to be 75% of full benefits.
Approximately AIME salary = 90% present salary.
Approximate only; contact Social Security for more detailed calculations.

The PIA computation formula for disabled workers parallels that for retired workers except the AIME is based on fewer years to reflect disablement before age 62. The monthly benefit amount of a disabled worker is 100 percent of PIA.

Benefits for spouses, children, and widow(er)s depend on the PIAs of a spouse or a deceased spouse. Aged spouse and divorced spouse beneficiaries can receive up to 50 percent of the PIA. Survivor benefit rates are higher and aged widow(er)s and aged surviving divorced spouses can receive 100 percent of the PIA.

Federal, state and local employees who have elected (when they could) NOT to pay FICA taxes are eligible for a reduced FICA benefits and full Medicare coverage if they have more than forty quarters of qualifying Social Security covered work. To minimize the Social Security payments to those who have not contributed to FICA for 35+ years and are eligible for federal, state and local benefits, which are usually more generous, Congress passed the Windfall Elimination Provision, WEP.[36] The WEP provision will not eliminate all Social Security or Medicare eligibility if the worker has 40 quarters of qualifying income, but calculates the benefit payments by reducing the 90% multiplier in the first PIA bendpoint to 40–85% depending on the number of Years of Coverage.[37] Foreign pensions are subject to WEP.

A special minimum benefit, based on an alternative PIA calculation, is available for some workers with long careers but low earnings. However, it is rarely higher than the regularly-computed PIA and thus few workers qualify for the special minimum benefit. Only 32,000 individuals received the special minimum benefit in 2019.[38]

The benefits someone is eligible for are potentially so complicated that potential retirees should consult the Social Security Administration directly for advice. Many questions are addressed and at least partially answered on many online publications and online calculators.

How workers can get estimates of benefits

The Social Security Administration (SSA) provides benefit estimates to workers through the Social Security Statement. The Statement can be accessed online by opening an online account with SSA called my Social Security. With that account, workers can also construct "what if" scenarios, helping them to understand the effect on monthly benefits if they work additional years or delay the start of retirement benefits. The my Social Security account also offers other services, allowing individuals to request a replacement Social Security card or check the status of an application.[39]

A printed copy of the Social Security Statement is mailed to workers age 60 or older.

In 2021, SSA began producing Retirement Ready fact sheets, available online and as part of the online Statement, that tailor retirement planning information to different age groups (young, middle age, and older workers).[40]

SSA also has a Benefits Calculators web page with several stand-alone online calculators that help individuals estimate their benefits and prepare for retirement.[41] These include benefit calculators for spouses, calculators for persons affected by the Windfall Elimination Provision or the Government Pension Offset and calculators to determine a person's full retirement age or the effect of the earnings test on benefits.

SSA also provides a life expectancy calculator to help with retirement planning.

Full retirement age (FRA)

If a person first claims a retirement benefit at the full retirement age (FRA), the individual will receive a monthly benefit amount equal to 100 percent of the individual's primary insurance amount (PIA). If first claimed before the FRA, the monthly benefit amount is smaller than 100 percent of PIA and if claimed after the FRA the monthly amount is higher than 100 percent of PIA. Sometimes the full retirement age is referred to as the normal retirement age.

Historically, the FRA was age 65. The 1983 Amendments to the Social Security Act gradually increased the FRA and, for individuals born in 1960 or later, the FRA is 67. The early retirement age (age 62) has not changed, but the monthly benefit amount paid at the early retirement age is lower if a person has a higher FRA. For example, when the FRA was age 65, the early retirement benefit was 80 percent of the worker's PIA. For a person with a FRA of 67, the early retirement benefit is 70 percent of PIA.

Year of birth Full retirement age[42]
1937 and prior 65
1938 65 and 2 months
1939 65 and 4 months
1940 65 and 6 months
1941 65 and 8 months
1942 65 and 10 months
1943 to 1954 66
1955 66 and 2 months
1956 66 and 4 months
1957 66 and 6 months
1958 66 and 8 months
1959 66 and 10 months
1960 and later 67

Individuals who first claim retirement benefits after the FRA (and up to age 70) receive delayed retirement credits that increase the monthly benefit amount by 8 percent per year of delayed claiming. For example, if a person has a FRA of 67 and waits until age 70 to claim retirement benefits, the individual's monthly benefit amount will be 124 percent of PIA.

Age when filing Change in benefits
from full amount[43][44]
62 -30%
63 -25%
64 -20%
65 -13.3%
66 -6.7
67 ----
68 +8%
69 +16%
70 +24%
Based on a full retirement age of 67

When a retirement beneficiary dies, a widow(er) or surviving divorced spouse is generally eligible for a monthly benefit amount equal to that received by the retirement beneficiary. Thus, a worker who delays retirement increases both the monthly benefit amount of the retirement benefit and, ultimately, the benefit a survivor receives.

Many press articles, guides, and studies have focused on whether it is optimal to claim benefits at the full retirement age or some other age. The Social Security Administration produces a publication called "When to Start Receiving Retirement Benefits" that is designed to help individuals understand the issues involved in deciding when to begin benefits.[33] The Center for Retirement Research at Boston College produced a guide designed to help individuals make informed claiming decisions.[45]

Between 1985 and 2015, claiming of retirement benefits at the early retirement age became much less common and claiming at the full retirement age or later more common. In 2019, 1 in 4 individuals claimed at the early retirement age.[46] From 2009 through 2019, the percentage of men claiming retirement benefits after the full retirement age increased from 4.1 percent to 16.2 percent.[47] The effects of the COVID-19 pandemic and ensuing recession and recovery on benefit claiming, however, are not yet known.[46]

The full retirement age is relevant for some benefit types other than retirement benefits. For example, aged spouses and aged survivors who claim spouse or survivor benefits before the full retirement age receive reduced spouse or survivor benefits. The increase in the full retirement age from the 1983 Amendments to the Social Security Act was phased in at a slightly different pace for survivor benefits and the full retirement age is 67 for survivors born in 1962 or later.[48] Many aged survivors, however, are well past the full retirement age when the worker dies and thus can receive full survivor benefits immediately upon the worker's death.

For some types of Social Security benefits, benefits are not reduced or increased based on the age the benefits are first claimed. For example, a full monthly benefit amount (100 percent of PIA) is paid to disabled workers regardless of the age at which benefits start. At the full retirement age, the Social Security Administration reclassifies disabled workers as retired workers but the individual's monthly benefit amount is not affected.

Delayed benefits

Delayed Social Security Increases
for retiring after full retirement age[49]

Year
of birth
Yearly
% increase
Monthly
% increase
1933–34 5.5% 11/24 of 1%
1935–36 6.0% 1/2 of 1%
1937–38 6.5% 13/24 of 1%
1939–40 7.0% 7/12 of 1%
1941–42 7.5% 5/8 of 1%
1943+ 8.0% 2/3 of 1%

If a worker delays receiving Social Security retirement benefits until after they reach full retirement age,[49] the benefit will increase by two-thirds of one percent of the PIA per month.[50] After age 70 there are no more increases as a result of delaying benefits. Social Security uses an "average" survival rate at your full retirement age to prorate the increase in the amount of benefit increase so that the total benefits are roughly the same whenever a person retires. Women may benefit more than men from this delayed benefit increase since the "average" survival rates are based on both men and women and women live approximately three years longer than men. The other consideration is that workers have only a limited number of years of "good" health left after they reach full retirement age and unless they enjoy their job they may be passing up an opportunity to do something else they may enjoy doing while they are still relatively healthy.

Benefits while continuing work

Due to changing needs or personal preferences, a person may go back to work after retiring. In this case, it is possible to get Social Security retirement or survivors benefits and work at the same time. A worker who is of full retirement age or older may (with spouse) keep all benefits, after taxes, regardless of earnings. But, if this worker or the worker's spouse are younger than full retirement age and receiving benefits and earn "too much", the benefits will be reduced. If working under full retirement age for the entire year and receiving benefits, Social Security deducts $1 from the worker's benefit payments for every $2 earned above the annual limit of $15,120 (2013). Deductions cease when the benefits have been reduced to zero and the worker will get one more year of income and age credit, slightly increasing future benefits at retirement. For example, if a person was receiving benefits of $1,230/month (the average benefit paid) or $14,760 a year and have an income of $29,520/year above the $15,120 limit ($44,640/year) that person would lose all ($14,760) of your benefits. If a person made $1,000 more than $15,200/year they would "only lose" $500 in benefits. People got no benefits for the months they worked until the $1 deduction for $2 income "squeeze" is satisfied. First social security checks are delayed for several months – the first check may be only a fraction of the "full" amount. The benefit deductions change in the year a person reaches full retirement age and are still working – Social Security deducts only one dollar in benefits for every three a person earns above $40,080 in 2013 for that year and has no deduction thereafter. The income limits change (presumably for inflation) year by year.[51]

Spouse's benefit and government pension offsets

The spouse or divorced spouse of a retirement beneficiary is eligible for a Social Security spouse benefit if the spouse or divorced spouse is 62 or older. The benefit amount is equal to 50 percent of the retirement beneficiary's Primary Insurance Amount if the spouse claims the benefit at the full retirement age or later. If a person is eligible for both a retirement benefit based the person's own work in Social Security covered employment and a spouse benefit based on a spouse's work in covered employment, SSA will pay a total amount approximately equal to the higher of the two benefits. For example, if at the full retirement age, a spouse claims a retirement benefit of $300 and a spouse benefit of $450, SSA will pay the person a $300 retirement benefit and a $150 dollar partial spouse benefit for a total benefit of $450.

A spouse is eligible after a one-year duration of marriage requirement is met and a divorced spouse is eligible for spousal benefits if the marriage lasted for at least ten years and the person applying is not currently married. Payment of benefits to a divorced spouse does not reduce the Social Security benefits of the retired worker or family members of the retired worker, such as the worker's current spouse. A divorced person can claim spousal benefits once the former spouse is eligible for retirement benefits, regardless of whether the former spouse has claimed those retirement benefits.

Spousal benefits are reduced if claimed before the full retirement age. The reduction is 25/36 of 1% per month for the first 36 months and 5/12 of 1% for each additional month earlier than the full retirement age. This typically works out to between 50% and 32.5% of the retirement beneficiary's Primary Insurance Amount. There is no increase for starting spousal benefits after the full retirement age.

Although Social Security rules are gender-neutral, spousal benefits are disproportionately paid to women.[52] Because of trends in marriage and workforce participation, retirement benefits are projected to become increasingly important for women, but spouse and survivor benefits will still be common.[53]

Because spouse benefits are only a 50 percent benefit and because divorced individuals do not share resources with a current husband or wife, divorced spouse beneficiaries have poverty rates that are "quite high." About 29 percent of divorced spouse beneficiaries are in poverty compared to only about 5.4 percent of married spouse beneficiaries.[54]

There is a Social Security government pension offset[55] that will reduce or eliminate any spousal (or ex-spouse) or widow(er)'s benefits if the spouse or widow(er) is also receiving a government (federal, state, or local) pension from work that did not require paying Social Security taxes. The basic rule is that Social Security benefits will be reduced by two-thirds of the spouse's or widow(er)'s government pension. If the spouse's or widow(er)'s government pension exceeds 150% of the "normal" spousal or widow(er)'s benefit the spousal benefit is eliminated. For example, a "normal" spousal or widow(er)'s benefit of $1,000/month would be reduced to $0.00 if the spouse or widow(er)'s if already drawing a non-FICA taxed government pension of $1,500/month or more per month. Pensions from work where Social Security taxes were paid do not reduce Social Security spousal or widow(er)'s benefits. Pensions received from foreign countries do not cause GPO; however, a foreign pension may be subject to the WEP.[56]

Widow(er) benefits

If a worker covered by Social Security dies, a surviving spouse can receive survivors' benefits if a 9-month duration of marriage is met. If a widow(er) waits until Full Retirement Age, they are eligible for 100 percent of their deceased spouse's PIA.[57] If the death of the worker was accidental the duration of marriage test may be waived.[58] A divorced spouse may qualify if the duration of marriage was at least ten full years and the widow(er) is not currently married, or remarried after attainment of age 60 (50 if disabled and eligible for specific types of benefits[59] prior to the date of marriage). A father or mother of any age with a child age 16 or under or a disabled adult child in his or her care may be eligible for benefits. The earliest age for a non-disabled widow(er)'s benefit is age 60. If the worker received retirement benefits prior to death, the benefit amount may not exceed the amount the worker was receiving at the time of death or 82.5% of the PIA of the deceased worker (whichever is more).[60] If the surviving spouse starts benefits before full retirement age, there is an actuarial reduction.[61] If the worker earned delayed retirement credits by waiting to start benefits after their full retirement age, the surviving spouse will have those credits applied to their benefit.[62] If the worker died before the year of attainment of age 62, the earnings will be indexed to the year in which the surviving spouse attained age 60.[63]

Children's benefits

Children of a retired, disabled or deceased worker receive benefits as a "dependent" or "survivor" if they are under the age of 18, or as long as attending primary or secondary school up to age 19 years and 2 months; or are over the age of 18 and were disabled before the age of 22.[61][64]

The benefit for a child on a living parent's record is 50% of the PIA, for a surviving child the benefit is 75% of the PIA. The benefit amount may be reduced if total benefits on the record exceed the family maximum.

In Astrue v. Capato (2012), the Supreme Court unanimously held that children conceived after a parent's death (by in vitro fertilization procedure) are not entitled to Social Security survivors' benefits if the laws of the state in which the parent's will was signed do not provide for such benefits.[65]

Disability

A worker who has worked long enough and recently enough (based on "quarters of coverage" within the recent past) to be covered can receive disability benefits. These benefits start after five full calendar months of disability, regardless of his or her age. The eligibility formula requires a certain number of credits (based on earnings) to have been earned overall, and a certain number within the ten years immediately preceding the disability, but with more-lenient provisions for younger workers who become disabled before having had a chance to compile a long earnings history.

The worker must be unable to continue in his or her previous job and unable to adjust to other work, with age, education, and work experience taken into account; furthermore, the disability must be long-term, lasting twelve months, expected to last twelve months, resulting in death, or expected to result in death.[66] As with the retirement benefit, the amount of the disability benefit payable depends on the worker's age and record of covered earnings.

Supplemental Security Income (SSI) uses the same disability criteria as the insured social security disability program, but SSI is not based upon insurance coverage. Instead, a system of means-testing is used to determine whether the claimants' income and net worth fall below certain income and asset thresholds.

Severely disabled children may qualify for SSI. Standards for child disability are different from those for adults.

Disability determination at the Social Security Administration has created the largest system of administrative courts in the United States. Depending on the state of residence, a claimant whose initial application for benefits is denied can request reconsideration or a hearing before an Administrative Law Judge (ALJ). Such hearings sometimes involve participation of an independent vocational expert (VE) or medical expert (ME), as called upon by the ALJ.

Reconsideration involves a re-examination of the evidence and, in some cases, the opportunity for a hearing before a (non-attorney) disability hearing officer. The hearing officer decides the case and provides justification for the finding in writing. If the claimant is denied at the reconsideration stage, (s)he may request a hearing before an Administrative Law Judge. In some states, SSA has implemented a pilot program that eliminates the reconsideration step and allows claimants to appeal an initial denial directly to an Administrative Law Judge.

Because the number of applications for Social Security disability is very large (approximately 650,000 applications per year), the number of hearings requested by claimants often exceeds the capacity of Administrative Law Judges. The number of hearings requested and availability of Administrative Law Judges varies geographically across the United States. In some areas of the country, it is possible for a claimant to have a hearing with an Administrative Law Judge within 90 days of the request. In other areas, waiting times of 18 months are not uncommon.

After the hearing, the Administrative Law Judge (ALJ) issues a decision in writing. The decision can be Fully Favorable (the ALJ finds the claimant disabled as of the date that (s) he alleges in the application through the present), Partially Favorable (the ALJ finds the claimant disabled at some point, but not as of the date alleged in the application; OR the ALJ finds that the claimant was disabled but has improved), or Unfavorable (the ALJ finds that the claimant was not disabled at all). Claimants can appeal decisions to Social Security's Appeals Council, which is in Virginia. The Appeals Council does not hold hearings; it accepts written briefs. Response time from the Appeals Council can range from twelve weeks to more than three years.

Claimant who disagrees with the Appeals Council's decision can appeal the case in the federal district court. As in most federal court cases, an unfavorable district court decision can be appealed to the appropriate United States Court of Appeals, and an unfavorable appellate court decision can be appealed to the United States Supreme Court.

The Social Security Administration has maintained its goal for judges to resolve 500–700 cases per year but Administrative Law Judges struggle to meet this goal. While 81% of Administrative Law Judges met this productivity level in 2019, only 18% achieved this case disposition target in 2020.[67] Office of Hearing Operations staffing and work procedure disruptions related to the COVID-19 pandemic have doubtlessly contributed to lower Administrative Law Judge productivity in 2020.

The debate about the social security system in the United States has been ongoing for decades and there is much concern about its sustainability.[68][69]

Current operation

Joining and quitting

Obtaining a Social Security number for a child is voluntary.[70] Further, there is no general legal requirement that individuals join the Social Security program unless they want or have to work. Under normal circumstances, FICA taxes or SECA taxes will be collected on all wages. About the only way to avoid paying either FICA or SECA taxes is to join a religion that does not believe in insurance, such as the Amish or a religion whose members have taken a vow of poverty (see IRS publication 517[71] and 4361[72]). Federal workers employed before 1987, various state and local workers including those in some school districts who had their own retirement and disability programs were given the one-time option of joining Social Security. Many employees and retirement and disability systems opted to keep out of the Social Security system because of the cost and the limited benefits. It was often much cheaper to obtain much higher retirement and disability benefits by staying in their original retirement and disability plans.[73] Now only a few of these plans allow new hires to join their existing plans without also joining Social Security. In 2004, the Social Security Administration estimated that 96% of all U.S. workers were covered by the system with the remaining 4% mostly a minority of government employees enrolled in public employee pensions and not subject to Social Security taxes due to historical exemptions.[74]

It is possible for railroad employees to get a "coordinated" retirement and disability benefits. The U.S. Railroad Retirement Board (or "RRB") is an independent agency in the executive branch of the United States government created in 1935[75] to administer a social insurance program providing retirement benefits to the country's railroad workers. Railroad retirement Tier I payroll taxes are coordinated with social security taxes so that employees and employers pay Tier I taxes at the same rate as social security taxes and have the same benefits. In addition, both workers and employers pay Tier II taxes (about 6.2% in 2005), which are used to finance railroad retirement and disability benefit payments that are over and above social security levels. Tier II benefits are a supplemental retirement and disability benefit system that pays 0.875% times years of service times average highest five years of employment salary, in addition to Social Security benefits.

The FICA taxes are imposed on nearly all workers and self-employed persons. Employers are required[76] to report wages for covered employment to Social Security for processing Forms W-2 and W-3. Some specific wages are not part of the Social Security program (discussed below). Internal Revenue Code provisions section 3101[77] imposes payroll taxes on individuals and employer matching taxes. Section 3102[78] mandates that employers deduct these payroll taxes from workers' wages before they are paid. Generally, the payroll tax is imposed on everyone in employment earning "wages" as defined in 3121[79] of the Internal Revenue Code.[80] and also taxes[81] net earnings from self-employment.[82]

Trust fund

 

Social Security taxes are paid into the Social Security Trust Fund maintained by the U.S. Treasury (technically, the "Federal Old-Age and Survivors Insurance Trust Fund", as established by 42 U.S.C. § 401(a)). Current year expenses are paid from current Social Security tax revenues. When revenues exceed expenditures, as they did between 1983 and 2009,[10] the excess is invested in special series, non-marketable U.S. government bonds. Thus, the Social Security Trust Fund indirectly finances the federal government's general purpose deficit spending. In 2007, the cumulative excess of Social Security taxes and interest received over benefits paid out stood at $2.2 trillion.[83] Some regard the Trust Fund as an accounting construct with no economic significance. Others argue that it has specific legal significance because the Treasury securities it holds are backed by the "full faith and credit" of the U.S. government, which has an obligation to repay its debt.[84]

The Social Security Administration's authority to make benefit payments as granted by Congress extends only to its current revenues and existing Trust Fund balance, i.e. redemption of its holdings of Treasury securities. Therefore, Social Security's ability to make full payments once annual benefits exceed revenues depends in part on the federal government's ability to make good on the bonds it has issued to the Social Security trust funds. As with any other federal obligation, the federal government's ability to repay Social Security is based on its power to tax and borrow and the commitment of Congress to meet its obligations.

In 2009 the Office of the Chief Actuary of the Social Security Administration calculated an unfunded obligation of $15.1 trillion for the Social Security program. The unfunded obligation is the difference between the future cost of Social Security (based on several demographic assumptions such as mortality, work force participation, immigration, and age expectancy) and total assets in the Trust Fund given the expected contribution rate through the current scheduled payroll tax. This unfunded obligation is expressed in present value dollars and is a part of the Fund's long-range actuarial estimates, not necessarily a certainty of what will occur in the long run. An Actuarial Note to the calculation says "the term obligation is used in lieu of the term liability, because liability generally indicates a contractual obligation (as in the case of private pensions and insurance) that cannot be altered by the plan sponsor without the agreement of the plan participants."[85][86]

Office of Hearings Operations (OHO, formerly ODAR or OHA)

On August 8, 2017, Acting Commissioner Nancy A. Berryhill informed employees that the Office of Disability Adjudication and Review ("ODAR") would be renamed to Office of Hearings Operations ("OHO").[87] The hearing offices had been known as "ODAR" since 2006, and the Office of Hearings and Appeals ("OHA") before that. OHO administers the ALJ hearings for the Social Security Administration.[88] Administrative Law Judges ("ALJs") conduct hearings and issue decisions. After an ALJ decision, the Appeals Council considers requests for review of ALJ decisions, and acts as the final level of administrative review for the Social Security Administration (the stage at which "exhaustion" could occur, a prerequisite for federal court review).[89]

Benefit payout comparisons

Some federal, state, local and education government employees pay no Social Security but have their own retirement, disability systems that nearly always pay much better retirement and disability benefits than Social Security. These plans typically require vesting (working 5–10 years for the same employer before becoming eligible for retirement). But their retirement typically depends on only the average of the best 3–10 years salaries times some retirement factor (typically 0.875%–3.0%) times years employed. This retirement benefit can be a "reasonably good" (75–85% of salary) retirement at close to the monthly salary they were last employed at. For example, if a person joined the University of California retirement system at age 25 and worked for 35 years they could receive 87.5% (2.5% × 35) of their average highest three year salary with full medical coverage at age 60. Police and firefighters who joined at 25 and worked for 30 years could receive 90% (3.0% × 30) of their average salary and full medical coverage at age 55. These retirements have cost of living adjustments (COLA) applied each year but are limited to a maximum average income of $350,000/year or less. Spousal survivor benefits are available at 100–67% of the primary benefits rate for 8.7% to 6.7% reduction in retirement benefits, respectively.[90] UCRP retirement and disability plan benefits are funded by contributions from both members and the university (typically 5% of salary each) and by the compounded investment earnings of the accumulated totals. These contributions and earnings are held in a trust fund that is invested. The retirement benefits are much more generous than Social Security but are believed to be actuarially sound. The main difference between state and local government sponsored retirement systems and Social Security is that the state and local retirement systems use compounded investments that are usually heavily weighted in the stock market securities, which historically have returned more than 7.0%/year on average despite some years with losses.[91] Short term federal government investments may be more secure but pay much lower average percentages. Nearly all other federal, state and local retirement systems work in a similar fashion with different benefit retirement ratios. Some plans are now combined with Social Security and are "piggy backed" on top of Social Security benefits. For example, the current Federal Employees Retirement System, which covers the vast majority of federal civil service employees hired after 1986, combines Social Security, a modest defined-benefit pension (1.1% per year of service) and the defined-contribution Thrift Savings Plan.

The current Social Security formula used in calculating the benefit level (primary insurance amount or PIA) is progressive vis-à-vis lower average salaries. Anyone who worked in OASDI covered employment and other retirement would be entitled to both the alternative non-OASDI pension and an Old Age retirement benefit from Social Security. Because of their limited time working in OASDI covered employment the sum of their covered salaries times inflation factor divided by 420 months yields a low adjusted indexed monthly salary over 35 years, AIME. The progressive nature of the PIA formula would in effect allow these workers to also get a slightly higher Social Security Benefit percentage on this low average salary. Congress passed in 1983 the Windfall Elimination Provision to minimize Social Security benefits for these recipients. The basic provision is that the first salary bracket, $0–791/month (2013) has its normal benefit percentage of 90% reduced to 40–90% – see Social Security for the exact percentage. The reduction is limited to roughly 50% of what a person would be eligible for if they had always worked under OASDI taxes. The 90% benefit percentage factor is not reduced if a person has 30 or more years of "substantial" earnings.[92]

The average Social Security payment of $1,230/month ($14,760/year) in 2013[93] is only slightly above the federal poverty level for one – $11,420/yr and below the poverty guideline of $15,500/yr for two.[94]

For this reason, financial advisers often encourage those who have the option to do so to supplement their Social Security contributions with private retirement plans. One "good" supplemental retirement plan option is an employer-sponsored 401(K) (or 403(B)) plan when they are offered by an employer. 58% of American workers have access to such plans.[95] Many of these employers will match a portion of an employee's savings dollar-for-dollar up to a certain percentage of the employee's salary. Even without employer matches, individual retirement accounts (IRAs) are portable, self-directed, tax-deferred retirement accounts that offer the potential to substantially increase retirement savings. Their limitations include: the financial literacy to tell a "good" investment account from a less advantageous one; the savings barrier faced by those who are in low-wage employment or burdened by debt; the requirement of self-discipline to allot from an early age the required percentage of salary into "good" investment account(s); and the self–discipline needed to leave it there to earn compound interest until needed after retirement. Financial advisers often suggest that long-term investment horizons should be used, as historically short-term investment losses "self correct", and most investments continue to deliver good average investment returns.[91] The IRS has tax penalties for withdrawals from IRAs, 401(K)s, etc. before the age of 59+12, and requires mandatory withdrawals once the retiree reaches 70; other restrictions may also apply on the amount of tax-deferred income one can put in the account(s).[96] For people who have access to them, self-directed retirement savings plans have the potential to match or even exceed the benefits earned by federal, state and local government retirement plans.

International agreements

People sometimes relocate from one country to another, either permanently or on a limited-time basis. This presents challenges to businesses, governments, and individuals seeking to ensure future benefits or having to deal with taxation authorities in multiple countries. To that end, the Social Security Administration has signed treaties, often referred to as Totalization Agreements, with other social insurance programs in various foreign countries.[97]

Overall, these agreements serve two main purposes. First, they eliminate dual Social Security taxation, the situation that occurs when a worker from one country works in another country and is required to pay Social Security taxes to both countries on the same earnings. Second, the agreements help fill gaps in benefit protection for workers who have divided their careers between the United States and another country.

The following countries have signed totalization agreements with the SSA (and the date the agreement became effective):[98]

Social Security number

A side effect of the Social Security program in the United States has been the near-universal adoption of the program's identification number, the Social Security number, as the de facto U.S. national identification number. The social security number, or SSN, is issued pursuant to section 205(c)(2) of the Social Security Act, codified as 42 U.S.C. § 405(c)(2). The government originally stated that the SSN would not be a means of identification,[99] but currently a multitude of U.S. entities use the Social Security number as a personal identifier. These include government agencies such as the Internal Revenue Service as well as the military, in addition to private agencies such as banks, colleges and universities, health insurance companies, and employers.

Although the Social Security Act itself does not require a person to have a Social Security Number (SSN) to live and work in the United States,[100] the Internal Revenue Code does generally require the use of the social security number by individuals for federal tax purposes:

The social security account number issued to an individual for purposes of section 205(c)(2)(A) of the Social Security Act shall, except as shall otherwise be specified under regulations of the Secretary [of the Treasury or his delegate], be used as the identifying number for such individual for purposes of this title.[101]

Importantly, most parents apply for Social Security numbers for their dependent children in order to[102] include them on their income tax returns as a dependent. Everyone filing a tax return, as taxpayer or spouse, must have a Social Security Number or Taxpayer Identification Number (TIN) since the IRS is unable to process returns or post payments for anyone without an SSN or TIN.

The Privacy Act of 1974 was in part intended to limit usage of the Social Security number as a means of identification. Paragraph (1) of subsection (a) of section 7 of the Privacy Act, an uncodified provision, states in part:

(1) It shall be unlawful for any Federal, State or local government agency to deny to any individual any right, benefit, or privilege provided by law because of such individual's refusal to disclose his social security account number.

However, the Social Security Act provides:

It is the policy of the United States that any State (or political subdivision thereof) may, in the administration of any tax, general public assistance, driver's license, or motor vehicle registration law within its jurisdiction, utilize the social security account numbers issued by the Commissioner of Social Security for the purpose of establishing the identification of individuals affected by such law, and may require any individual who is or appears to be so affected to furnish to such State (or political subdivision thereof) or any agency thereof having administrative responsibility for the law involved, the social security account number (or numbers, if he has more than one such number) issued to him by the Commissioner of Social Security.[103]

Further, paragraph (2) of subsection (a) of section 7 of the Privacy Act provides in part:

(2) the provisions of paragraph (1) of this subsection shall not apply with respect to –
(A) any disclosure which is required by Federal statute, or
(B) the disclosure of a social security number to any Federal, State, or local agency maintaining a system of records in existence and operating before January 1, 1975, if such disclosure was required under statute or regulation adopted prior to such date to verify the identity of an individual.[104]

The exceptions under section 7 of the Privacy Act include the Internal Revenue Code requirement that social security numbers be used as taxpayer identification numbers for individuals.[105]

Demographic and revenue projections

In each year since 1982, OASDI tax receipts, interest payments and other income have exceeded benefit payments and other expenditures, for example by more than $150 billion in 2004.[106] As the "baby boomers" move out of the work force and into retirement, however, expenses will come to exceed tax receipts and then, after several more years, will exceed all OASDI trust income, including interest. At that point the system will begin drawing on its trust fund Treasury Notes, and will continue to pay benefits at the current levels until the Trust Fund is exhausted. In 2013, the OASDI retirement insurance fund collected $731.1 billion and spent $645.5 billion; the disability program (DI) collected $109.1 billion and spent $140.3 billion; Medicare (HI) collected $243.0 billion and spent $266.8 billion and Supplementary Medical Insurance, SMI, collected $293.9 billion and spent $307.4 billion. In 2013 all Social Security programs except the retirement trust fund (OASDI) spent more than they brought in and relied on significant withdrawals from their respective trust funds to pay their bills. The retirement (OASDI) trust fund of $2.541 trillion is expected to be emptied by 2033 by one estimate as new retirees become eligible to join. The disability (DI) trust fund's $153.9 billion will be exhausted by 2018; the Medicare (HI) trust fund of $244.2 billion will be exhausted by 2023 and the Supplemental Medical Insurance (SMI) trust fund will be exhausted by 2020 if the present rate of withdrawals continues – even sooner if they increase. The total "Social Security" expenditures in 2013 were $1,360 billion dollars, which was 8.4% of the $16,200 billion GNP (2013) and 37.0% of the federal expenditures of $3,684 billion (including a $971.0 billion deficit).[107][108] All other parts of the Social Security program: medicare (HI), disability (DI) and Supplemental Medical (SMI) trust funds are already drawing down their trust funds and are projected to go into deficit in about 2020 if the present rate of withdrawals continue.[109] As the trust funds are exhausted either benefits will have to be cut, fraud minimized or taxes increased.

In 2005, this exhaustion of the OASDI Trust Fund was projected to occur in 2041 by the Social Security Administration[110] or by 2052 by the Congressional Budget Office, CBO.[111] Thereafter, however, the projection for the exhaustion date of this event was moved up slightly after the 2008-2009 recession worsened the U.S. economy's financial picture. The 2011 OASDI Trustees Report stated:

Annual cost exceeded non-interest income in 2010 and is projected to continue to be larger throughout the remainder of the 75-year valuation period. Nevertheless, from 2010 through 2022, total trust fund income, including interest income, is more than is necessary to cover costs, so trust fund assets will continue to grow during that time. Beginning in 2023, trust fund assets will diminish until they become exhausted in 2036. Non-interest income is projected to be sufficient to support expenditures at a level of 77 percent of scheduled benefits after trust fund exhaustion in 2036, and then to decline to 74 percent of scheduled benefits in 2085.[112]

In 2007, the Social Security Trustees suggested that either the payroll tax could increase to 16.41 percent in 2041 and steadily increased to 17.60 percent in 2081 or a cut in benefits by 25 percent in 2041 and steadily increased to an overall cut of 30 percent in 2081.[113]

The Social Security Administration projects that the demographic situation will stabilize. The cash flow deficit in the Social Security system will have leveled off as a share of the economy. This projection has come into question. Some demographers argue that life expectancy will improve more than projected by the Social Security Trustees, a development that would make solvency worse. Some economists believe future productivity growth will be higher than the current projections by the Social Security Trustees. In this case, the Social Security shortfall would be smaller than currently projected.

Tables published by the government's National Center for Health Statistics show that life expectancy at birth was 47.3 years in 1900, rose to 68.2 by 1950 and reached 77.3 in 2002. The latest annual report of the Social Security Agency (SSA) trustees projects that life expectancy will increase just six years in the next seven decades, to 83 in 2075. A separate set of projections, by the Census Bureau, shows more rapid growth.[114] The Census Bureau projection is that the longer life spans projected for 2075 by the Social Security Administration will be reached in 2050. Other experts, however, think the past gains in life expectancy cannot be repeated, and add that the adverse effect on the system's finances may be partly offset if health improvements or reduced retirement benefits induce people to stay in the workforce longer.

Actuarial science, of the kind used to project the future solvency of social security, is subject to uncertainty. The SSA actually makes three predictions: optimistic, midline, and pessimistic (until the late 1980s it made four). The Social Security crisis that was developing prior to the 1983 reforms resulted from midline projections that turned out to be too optimistic. It has been argued that the overly pessimistic projections of the mid to late 1990s were partly the result of the low economic growth (according to actuary David Langer) assumptions that resulted in pushing back the projected exhaustion date (from 2028 to 2042) with each successive Trustee's report.[citation needed] During the heavy-boom years of the 1990s, the midline projections were too pessimistic. Obviously, projecting out 75 years is a significant challenge and, as such, the actual situation might be much better or much worse than predicted. Unfortunately, SSA's projection technology remained the same over many decades, despite fast progress in the same period in the literature on statistical forecasting methods, leading to large systematic forecasting biases.[115][116]

The Social Security Advisory Board has on three occasions since 1999 appointed a Technical Advisory Panel to review the methods and assumptions used in the annual projections for the Social Security trust funds. The most recent report of the Technical Advisory Panel, released in June 2008 with a copyright date of October 2007, includes a number of recommendations for improving the Social Security projections.[117][118] As of December 2013, under current law, the Congressional Budget Office reported that the "Disability Insurance trust fund will be exhausted in fiscal year 2017 and the Old-Age and Survivors Insurance trust fund will be exhausted in 2033."[119] Costs of Social Security have already started to exceed income since 2018. This means the trust funds have already begun to be empty and will be fully depleted in the near future. As of 2018, the projections made by the Social Security Administration estimates that Social Security program as a whole will deplete all reserves by 2034.[120]

Increased spending for Social Security will occur at the same time as increases in Medicare, as a result of the aging of the baby boomers. One projection illustrates the relationship between the two programs:

From 2004 to 2030, the combined spending on Social Security and Medicare is expected to rise from 8% of national income (gross domestic product) to 13%. Two-thirds of the increase occurs in Medicare.[121]

In an annually issued report released in August 2021, the U.S. Treasury Department announced that the Old-Age and Survivors Trust Fund was projected to be able to pay scheduled benefits until 2033 while the Disability Insurance Trust Fund was projected to be able to pay its benefits through 2057, 1 year and 8 years earlier respectively than the previous report found.[122] In June 2022, the Treasury Department issued an updated report for the Old-Age and Survivors Insurance and Disability Insurance Trust Funds with revised projections for their ability to pay scheduled benefits to 2034 and 2097 respectively due to accelerated recovery from the COVID-19 recession.[123]

Ways to eliminate the projected shortfall

 

Social Security is predicted to start running out of having enough money to pay all prospective retirees at today's benefit payouts by 2034.[120]

  • Lift the payroll ceiling. The payroll ceiling is now adjusted for inflation.[124] Robert Reich, former United States Secretary of Labor, suggests lifting the ceiling on income subject to Social Security taxes, which is $142,800 as of 2021.[125]
  • Increase Social Security taxes. If workers and employers each paid 7.6% (up from today's 6.2%), it would eliminate the financing gap altogether. This 1.4% increase (2.8% for self-employed)[dubious ] has over 60% support in surveys conducted by the National Academy of Social Insurance (NASI).[126][failed verification]
  • Raise the retirement age(s). Raising the early retirement option from age 62 to 64 would help to reduce Social Security benefit payouts.[citation needed]
  • Means-test benefits. A phase out of Social Security benefits for those who already have income over $48,000/year ($4,000/month) would eliminate over 20% of the funding gap. This is not very popular, with only 31% of surveyed households favoring it.[126]
  • Change the cost-of-living adjustment, COLA. Several proposals have been discussed. Effects of COLA reductions would be cumulative over time and would affect some groups more than others. Poverty rates would increase.[127]
  • Reduce benefits for new retirees. If Social Security benefits were reduced by 3% to 5% for new retirees, about 18% to 30% percent of the funding gap would be eliminated.[citation needed]
  • Average in more working years. Social Security benefits are now based on an average of a worker's 35 highest paid salaries with zeros averaged in if there are fewer than 35 years of covered wages. The averaging period could be increased to 38 or 40 years, which could potentially reduce the deficit by 10 to 20%, respectively.[citation needed]
  • Require all newly hired people to join Social Security. Over 90% of all workers already pay FICA and SECA taxes, so there is not much to gain by this. There would be an early increase in Social Security income that would be partially offset later by the benefits they might collect when they retire.[citation needed]

Taxation

 

Tax on wages and self-employment income

Benefits are funded by taxes imposed on wages of employees and self-employed persons. As explained below, in the case of employment, the employer and employee are each responsible for one half of the Social Security tax, with the employee's half being withheld from the employee's pay check. In the case of self-employed persons (i.e., independent contractors), the self-employed person is responsible for the entire amount of Social Security tax.

The portion of taxes collected from the employee for Social Security are referred to as "trust fund taxes" and the employer is required to remit them to the government. These taxes take priority over everything, and represent the only debts of a corporation or LLC that can impose personal liability upon its officers or managers. A sole proprietor and officers of a corporation and managers of an LLC can be held personally liable for non-payment of the income tax and social security taxes whether or not actually collected from the employee.[128]

The Federal Insurance Contributions Act (FICA) (codified in the Internal Revenue Code) imposes a Social Security withholding tax equal to 6.20% of the gross wage amount, up to but not exceeding the Social Security Wage Base ($97,500 for 2007; $102,000 for 2008; and $106,800 for 2009, 2010, and 2011). The same 6.20% tax is imposed on employers. For 2011 and 2012, the employee's contribution was reduced to 4.2%, while the employer's portion remained at 6.2%.[129][130] In 2012, the wage base increased to $110,100.[131] In 2013, the wage base increased to $113,700.[132] For each calendar year for which the worker is assessed the FICA contribution, the SSA credits those wages as that year's covered wages. The income cutoff is adjusted yearly for inflation and other factors.

A separate payroll tax of 1.45% of an employee's income is paid directly by the employer, and an additional 1.45% deducted from the employee's paycheck, yielding a total tax rate of 2.90%. There is no maximum limit on this portion of the tax. This portion of the tax is used to fund the Medicare program, which is primarily responsible for providing health benefits to retirees.

The Social Security tax rates from 1937–2010 can be accessed on the Social Security Administration's[133] website.

The combined tax rate of these two federal programs is 15.30% (7.65% paid by the employee and 7.65% paid by the employer). In 2011–2012 it temporarily dropped to 13.30% (5.65% paid by the employee and 7.65% paid by the employer).

For self-employed workers (who technically are not employees and are deemed not to be earning "wages" for federal tax purposes), the self-employment tax, imposed by the Self-Employment Contributions Act of 1954, codified as Chapter 2 of Subtitle A of the Internal Revenue Code, 26 U.S.C. §§ 1401–1403, is 15.3% of "net earnings from self-employment."[134] In essence, a self-employed individual pays both the employee and employer share of the tax, although half of the self-employment tax (the "employer share") is deductible when calculating the individual's federal income tax.[135][136]

If an employee has overpaid payroll taxes by having more than one job or switching jobs during the year, the excess taxes will be refunded when the employee files his federal income tax return. Any excess taxes paid by employers, however, are not refundable to the employers.

By Congressional Budget Office (CBO) calculations the lowest income quintile (0–20%) and second quintile (21–40%) of households in the U.S. pay an average income tax of −9.3% and −2.6% and Social Security taxes of 8.3% and 7.9% respectively. By CBO calculations the household incomes in the first quintile and second quintile have an average Total Federal Tax rate of 1.0% and 3.8% respectively.[137]

Wages not subject to tax

Workers are not required to pay Social Security taxes on wages from certain types of work:[138]

  • A student working part-time for a university, enrolled at least half-time at the same university, and their relationship with the university is primarily an educational one.[139]
  • A student who is a household employee for a college club, fraternity, or sorority, and is enrolled and regularly attending classes at a university.[140]
  • A child under age 18 (or under age 21 for domestic service) who is employed by their parent.[141][142]
  • A person who receives payments from a state or a local government for services performed to be relieved from unemployment.[143]
  • An incarcerated person who works for the state or local government that operates the prison in which the person is incarcerated.[144][145][146]
  • A person at an institution who works for the state of local government that operates the institution.[144][145]
  • An employee of a state or local government who was hired on a temporary basis in response to a specific unforeseen fire, storm, snow, earthquake, flood, or a similar emergency, and the employee is not intended to become a permanent employee.[147][148]
  • A newspaper carrier under age 18.[149]
  • A real estate agent or salespeople's compensation if substantially all the compensation is directly related to sales or other output, rather than to the number of hours worked, and there is a written contract stating that the individual will not be treated as an employee for federal tax purposes.[150][151] The compensation is exempt if[150][151] * Employees of state or local government entities in Alaska, California, Colorado, Illinois, Louisiana, Maine, Massachusetts, Nevada, Ohio, and Texas.[152]
  • Earnings as a council member of a federally recognized Indian tribe.[153][154]
  • A fishing worker who is a member of a federally recognized Indian tribe that has recognized fishing rights.[155][154]
  • A nonresident alien who is an employee of a foreign government on wages paid in their official capacities as foreign government employees.[156]
  • A nonresident alien who is employed by a foreign employer as a crew member working on a foreign ship or foreign aircraft.[156][157]
  • A nonresident alien who is a student, scholar, professor, teacher, trainee, researcher, physician, au pair, or summer camp worker and is temporarily in the United States in F-1, J-1, M-1, Q-1, or Q-2 nonimmigrant status for wages paid to them for services that are allowed by their visa status and are performed to carry out the purposes the visa status.[156]
  • A nonresident alien who is an employee of an international organization on wages paid by the international organization.[156]
  • A nonresident alien who is on an H-2A visa.[156]
  • A nonresident alien who works in Guam, is a resident of the Philippines, and is on an H-2A, H-2B, or H-2R visa.[156]
  • A member of certain religious groups, such as the Mennonites and the Amish, who consider insurance to be a lack of trust in God, and see it as their religious duty to provide for members who are sick, disabled, or elderly.[158][159][160]
  • A person who is temporarily working outside their country of origin and is covered under a tax treaty between their country and the United States.[161]
  • Net annual earnings from self-employment of less than $400.
  • Wages received for service as an election worker, if less than $1,400 a year (in 2008).
  • Wages received for working as a household employee, if less than $1,700 per year (in 2009–2010).

Federal income taxation of benefits

Originally the benefits received by retirees were not taxed as income. Beginning in tax year 1984, with the Reagan-era reforms to repair the system's projected insolvency, retirees with incomes over $25,000 (in the case of married persons filing separately who did not live with the spouse at any time during the year, and for persons filing as "single"), or with combined incomes over $32,000 (if married filing jointly) or, in certain cases, any income amount (if married filing separately from the spouse in a year in which the taxpayer lived with the spouse at any time) generally saw part of the retiree benefits subject to federal income tax.[162] In 1984, the portion of the benefits potentially subject to tax was 50%.[163] The Deficit Reduction Act of 1993 set the portion to 85%. Moreover, since the taxable income threshold is not indexed to inflation, the portion of beneficiaries' social security payments subject to income tax has risen significantly in real terms since the threshold was set in 1984.

Criticisms

Claim of discrimination against the poor and the middle class

 
For people in the bottom fifth of the earnings distribution, the ratio of benefits to taxes is almost three times as high as it is for those in the top fifth.[164]

Workers must pay 12.4 percent, including a 6.2 percent employer contribution, on their wages below the Social Security Wage Base ($142,800 in 2021), but no tax on income in excess of this amount.[6][165] Therefore, high earners pay a lower percentage of their total income because of the income caps; because of this, and the fact there is no tax on unearned income, social security taxes are often viewed as being regressive. However, benefits are adjusted to be significantly more progressive, even when accounting for differences in life expectancy. According to the non-partisan Congressional Budget Office, for people in the bottom fifth of the earnings distribution, the ratio of benefits to taxes is almost three times as high as it is for those in the top fifth.[164]

Despite its regressive tax rate, Social Security benefits are calculated using a progressive benefit formula that replaces a much higher percentage of low-income workers' pre-retirement income than that of higher-income workers (although these low-income workers pay a higher percentage of their pre-retirement income).[166] Supporters of the current system also point to numerous studies that show that, relative to high-income workers, Social Security disability and survivor benefits paid on behalf of low-income workers more than offset any retirement benefits that may be lost because of shorter life expectancy (this offset would apply only at a population level).[167][168][169] Other research asserts that survivor benefits, allegedly an offset, actually exacerbate the problem because survivor benefits are denied to single individuals, including widow(er)s married fewer than nine months (except in certain situations),[170] divorced widow(er)s married fewer than ten years,[171] and co-habiting or same-sex couples, unless they are legally married in their state of residence.[172][173][174][175][176] Unmarried individuals and minorities tend to be less wealthy.[177]

Social Security's benefit formula provides 90% of average indexed monthly earnings (AIME) below the first "bend point" of $791/month, 32% of AIME between the first and second bend points $791 to $4781/month, and 15% of AIME in excess of the second bend point up to the Ceiling cap of $113,700 in 2013.[178] The low income bias of the benefit calculation means that a lower paid worker receives a much higher percentage of his or her salary in benefit payments than higher paid workers. In fact, a married low salaried worker can receive over 100% of their salary in benefits after retiring at the full retirement age. High-salaried workers receive 43% or less of their salary in benefits despite having paid into the "system" at the same rate (see benefit calculations above). To minimize the impact of Social Security taxes on low salaried workers the Earned Income Tax Credit and the Child Care Tax Credit were passed, which largely refund the FICA and or SECA payments of low-salaried workers through the income tax system.[137] By Congressional Budget Office (CBO) calculations the lowest income quintile (0–20%) and second quintile (21–40%) of households in the U.S. pay an average federal income tax of −9.3% and −2.6% of income and Social Security taxes of 8.3% and 7.9% of income respectively. By CBO calculations the household incomes in the first and second quintiles have an average total federal tax rate of 1.0% and 3.8% respectively.[137] However, these groups also have by far the smallest percentage of American household incomes – the first quintile earns just 3.2% of all income, while the second quintile earns only 8.4% of all income.[179] Higher-income retirees will have to pay income taxes on 85% of their Social Security benefits and 100% on all other retirement benefits they may have.[31]

Marital status

The Social Security Act defines the rules for determining marital relationships for SSI recipients. The act requires that if a couple is cohabitating they should be considered married for purposes of the SSI program.[180] Consequently, if the claimant is found disabled and found to be "holding out"; this claimant will be entitled to reduced or no SSI benefits.[181] However, the Social Security Act does not accept that a claimant "holding out as husband or wife" should be entitled of Survivor, Retirement or Widows benefits, when the claimant's "husband or wife" dies.[182] SSA rules and regulations about marital status either prohibit (SRDI program) or reduce (SSI program) benefits to indigent claimants.

Claim that politicians exempted themselves from the tax

Critics of Social Security have said that the politicians who created Social Security exempted themselves from having to pay the Social Security tax.[183] When the federal government created Social Security, all federal employees, including the president and members of Congress, were exempt from having to pay the Social Security tax, and they received no Social Security benefits. This law was changed by the Social Security Amendments of 1983, which brought within the Social Security system all members of Congress, the president and the vice president, federal judges, and certain executive-level political appointees, as well as all federal employees hired in any capacity on or after January 1, 1984.[184] Many state and local government workers, however, are exempt from Social Security taxes because they contribute instead to alternative retirement systems set up by their employers.[185]

Comparison to a Ponzi scheme

Critics have drawn parallels between Social Security and Ponzi schemes,[186][187] arguing that the sustenance of Social Security is due to continuous contributions over time. One difference between a traditional Ponzi scheme and Social Security, is that while both may have similar structures—in particular, a sustainability problem when the number of new people paying in is declining—they have differing degrees of transparency. In the case of a traditional Ponzi scheme, the fact that there is no return-generating mechanism other than contributions from new entrants is obscured[188] whereas the Social Security scheme is designed to have payouts openly underwritten by incoming tax revenue and the interest on the Treasury bonds held by or for the Social Security scheme.[189] Private sector Ponzi schemes are also vulnerable to collapse because they cannot force new entrants to contribute, whereas participation in the Social Security program is mandatory upon beginning one's first job in the United States. In connection with these and other issues, Robert E. Wright calls Social Security a pyramid scheme—rather than a true Ponzi scheme—in his book, Fubarnomics.

Estimated net benefits under differing circumstances

 
Single men with different wages and retirement dates

In 2004, Urban Institute economists C. Eugene Steuerle and Adam Carasso created a Web-based Social Security benefits calculator.[190] Using this calculator it is possible to estimate net Social Security benefits (i.e., estimated lifetime benefits minus estimated lifetime FICA taxes paid) for different types of recipients. In the book Democrats and Republicans – Rhetoric and Reality Joseph Fried used the calculator to create graphical depictions of the estimated net benefits of men and women who were at different wage levels, single and married (with stay-at-home spouses), and retiring in different years. These graphs vividly show that generalizations about Social Security benefits may be of little predictive value for any given worker, due to the wide disparity of net benefits for people at different income levels and in different demographic groups. For example, the graph below (Figure 168) shows the impact of wage level and retirement date on a male worker. As income goes up, net benefits get smaller – even negative.

 
Impact of gender and wage levels on net SS benefits

However, the impact is much greater for the future retiree (in 2045) than for the current retiree (2005). The male earning $95,000 per year and retiring in 2045 is estimated to lose over $200,000 by participating in the Social Security system.[191]

In the next graph (Figure 165) the depicted net benefits are averaged for people turning age 65 anytime during the years 2005 through 2045. (In other words, the disparities shown are not related to retirement.) However, we do see the impact of gender and wage level. Because women tend to live longer, they generally collect Social Security benefits for a longer time. As a result, they get a higher net benefit, on average, no matter what the wage level.[192]

 
Net lifetime SS benefits of married men and women where only one person works

The next image (Figure 166) shows estimated net benefits for married men and women at different wage levels. In this particular scenario it is assumed that the spouse has little or no earnings and, thus, will be entitled to collect a spousal retirement benefit. According to Fried:

Two significant factors are evident: First, every column in Figure 166 depicts a net benefit that is higher than any column in Figure 165. In other words, the average married person (with a stay-at-home spouse) gets a greater benefit per FICA tax dollar paid than does the average single person, no matter what the gender or wage level. Second, there is only limited progressivity among married workers with stay-at-home spouses. Review Figure 166 carefully: The net benefits drop as the wage levels increase from $50,000 to $95,000; however, they increase as the wage levels grow from $5,000 to $50,000. In fact, net benefits are lowest for those earning just $5,000 per year.[193]

The last graph shown (Figure 167) is a combination of Figures 165 and 166. In this graph it is very clear why generalizations about the value of Social Security benefits are meaningless. At the $95,000 wage level a married person could be a big winner, getting net benefits of about $165,000. On the other hand, he could lose an estimated $152,000 in net benefits if he remains single. Altogether, there is a "swing" of over $300,000 based upon the marriage decision (and the division of earnings between the spouses). In addition there is a large disparity between the high net benefits of the married person earning $95,000 ($165,152) versus the relatively low net benefits of the man or woman earning just $5,000 ($30,025 or $41,890, depending on gender). In other words, the high earner, in this scenario, gets a far greater return on his FICA tax investment than does the low earner.[194]

 
Comparison of net SS benefits

In the book How Social Security Picks Your Pocket other factors affecting Social Security net benefits are identified: Generally, people who work for more than 35 years get a lower net benefit, all other factors being equal. People who do not live long after retirement age get a much lower net benefit. Finally, people who derive a high percentage of income from non-wage sources get high Social Security net benefits because they appear to be poor, when they are not. The progressive benefit formula for Social Security is blind to the income a worker may have from non-wage sources, such as spousal support, dividends and interest, or rental income.[195]

Current controversies

Proposals to reform of the Social Security system have led to heated debate, centering on funding of the program. In particular, proposals to privatize funding have caused great controversy.

Contrast with private pensions

Although Social Security is sometimes compared to private pensions, the two systems are different in a number of respects. It has been argued that Social Security is an insurance plan as opposed to a retirement plan. Unlike a pension, for example, Social Security pays disability benefits. A private pension fund accumulates the money paid into it, eventually using those reserves to pay pensions to the workers who contributed to the fund; and a private system is not universal. Social Security cannot "prefund" by investing in marketable assets such as equities, because federal law prohibits it from investing in assets other than those backed by the U.S. government. As a result, its investments to date have been limited to special non-negotiable securities issued by the U.S. Treasury, although some[citation needed] argue that debt issued by the Federal National Mortgage Association and other quasi-governmental organizations could meet legal standards. Social Security cannot by law invest in private equities, although some other countries (such as Canada) and some states permit their pension funds to invest in private equities. As a universal system, Social Security generally operates as a pipeline, through which current tax receipts from workers are used to pay current benefits to retirees, survivors, and the disabled. When there is an excess of taxes withheld over benefits paid, by law this excess is invested in Treasury securities (not in private equities) as described above.

Two broad categories of private pension plans are "defined benefit pension plans" and "defined contribution pension plans." Of these two, Social Security is more similar to a defined benefit pension plan. In a defined benefit pension plan, the benefits ultimately received are based on some sort of pre-determined formula (such as one based on years worked and highest salary earned). Defined benefit pension plans generally do not include separate accounts for each participant. By contrast, in a defined contribution pension plan each participant has a specific account with funds put into that account (by the employer or the participant, or both), and the ultimate benefit is based on the amount in that account at the time of retirement. Some have proposed that the Social Security system be modified to provide for the option of individual accounts (in effect, to make the system, at least in part, more like a defined contribution pension plan). Specifically, on February 2, 2005, President George W. Bush made Social Security a prominent theme of his State of the Union Address.[196] He described the Social Security system as "headed for bankruptcy", and outlined, in general terms, a proposal based on partial privatization. Critics responded that privatization would require huge new government borrowing to fund benefit payments during the transition years. See Social Security debate (United States).

Both "defined benefit" and "defined contribution" private pension plans are governed by the Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA), which requires employers to provide minimum levels of funding to support "defined benefits" pensions. The purpose is to protect the workers from corporate mismanagement and outright bankruptcy, although in practice many private pension funds have fallen short in recent years. In terms of financial structure, the current Social Security system is analogous to an underfunded "defined benefit" pension ("underfunded" meaning not that it is in trouble, but that its savings are not enough to pay future benefits without collecting future tax revenues).

Contrast with insurance

Besides the argument over whether the returns on Social Security contributions should or can be compared to returns on private investment instruments, there is the question of whether the contributions are nonetheless analogous to pooled insurance premiums charged by for-profit commercial insurance companies to maintain and generate a return on a "risk pool of funds".[197] Like any insurance program, Social Security "spreads risk" as the program protects workers and covered family members against loss of income from the wage earner's retirement, disability, or death. For example, a worker who becomes disabled at a young age could receive a large return relative to the amount they contributed in FICA before becoming disabled, since disability benefits can continue for life. As in private insurance plans, everyone in the particular insurance pool is insured against the same risks, but not everyone will benefit to the same extent.

The analogy to insurance, however, is limited[198] by the fact that paying FICA taxes creates no legal right to benefits[199] and by the extent to which Social Security is, in fact, funded by FICA taxes. During 2011 and 2012, for example, FICA tax revenue was insufficient to maintain Social Security's solvency without transfers from general revenues. These transfers added to the general budget deficit like general program spending.[200][201][202]

Private retirement savings crisis

While inflation-adjusted stock market values generally rose from 1978 to 1997, from 1998 through 2007 they were higher than in March 2013.[203] This has caused workers' supplemental retirement plans such as 401(k)s to perform substantially more poorly than expected when current retirees were investing the bulk of their savings in them.[204][205] In 2010, the median household retirement account balance for workers aged 55 to 64 was $120,000, which will provide only a trivial supplement to Social Security benefits, but about a third of households had no retirement savings at all.[206] 75% of Americans nearing retirement age had less than $30,000 in their retirement accounts, which Forbes called "the greatest retirement crisis in American history."[207]

Court interpretation of the Act to provide benefits

The United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit has indicated that the Social Security Act has a moral purpose and should be liberally interpreted in favor of claimants when deciding what counted as covered wages for purposes of meeting the quarters of coverage requirement to make a worker eligible for benefits.[208] That court has also stated: "... [T]he regulations should be liberally applied in favor of beneficiaries" when deciding a case in favor of a felon who had his disability payments retroactively terminated upon incarceration.[209] According to the court, that the Social Security Act "should be liberally construed in favor of those seeking its benefits can not be doubted."[210] "The hope behind this statute is to save men and women from the rigors of the poor house as well as from the haunting fear that such a lot awaits them when journey's end is near."[211]

Constitutionality

The constitutionality of Social Security is intricately linked to the evolving nature of Supreme Court jurisprudence on federal power (the 20th century saw a dramatic increase in allowed congressional action). When Social Security was first passed, there were significant questions over its constitutionality as the Court had found another pension scheme, the original Railroad Retirement Act, to violate the due process clause of the Fifth Amendment. Some, such as University of Chicago law professor Richard Epstein and Harvard University professor Robert Nozick, have argued that Social Security should be unconstitutional.[212][213][citation needed]

In the 1937 U.S. Supreme Court case of Helvering v. Davis,[214] the Court examined the constitutionality of Social Security when George Davis of the Edison Electric Illuminating Company of Boston sued in connection with the Social Security tax. The U.S. District Court for the District of Massachusetts first upheld the tax. The District Court judgment was reversed by the Circuit Court of Appeals. Commissioner Guy Helvering of the Bureau of Internal Revenue (now the Internal Revenue Service) took the case to the Supreme Court, and the Court upheld the validity of the tax.

During the 1930s President Franklin Delano Roosevelt was in the midst of promoting the passage of a large number of social welfare programs under the New Deal and the Supreme Court struck down many of those programs (such as the Railroad Retirement Act and the National Recovery Act) as unconstitutional. Modified versions of the affected programs were afterwards approved by the Court, including Social Security.

When Helvering v. Davis was argued before the Court, the larger issue of constitutionality of the old-age insurance portion of Social Security was not decided. The case was limited to whether the payroll tax was a suitable use of Congress's taxing power. Despite this, no serious challenges regarding the system's constitutionality are now being litigated, and Congress's spending power may be more coextensive, as shown in cases like South Dakota v. Dole[215] during the Reagan Administration.

Fraud and abuse

Social Security Number theft

Because Social Security Numbers have become useful in identity theft and other forms of crime, various schemes have been perpetrated to acquire valid Social Security Numbers and related identity information.

In February 2006, the Social Security Administration received several reports of an email message being circulated addressed to "Dear Social Security Number And Card owner" and purporting to be from the Social Security Administration. The message informs the reader "that someone illegally is using your Social Security number and assuming your identity" and directs the reader to a website designed to look like Social Security's Internet website.

"I am outraged that someone would target an unsuspecting public in this manner," said Commissioner Jo Anne B. Barnhart. "I have asked the Inspector General to use all the resources at his command to find and prosecute whoever is perpetrating this fraud."[216]

Once directed to the phony website, the individual is reportedly asked to confirm his or her identity with "Social Security and bank information". Specific information about the individual's credit card number, expiration date and PIN is then requested. "Whether on our online website or by phone, Social Security will never ask you for your credit card information or your PIN," Commissioner Jo Anne B. Barnhart reported.

Social Security Administration Inspector General O'Carroll recommended people always take precautions when giving out personal information. "You should never provide your Social Security number or other personal information over the Internet or by telephone unless you are extremely confident of the source to whom you are providing the information," O'Carroll said.[216]

Fraud in the acquisition and use of benefits

Given the vast size of the program, fraud sometimes occurs. The Social Security Administration has its own investigatory unit[217] to combat and prevent fraud, the Cooperative Disability Investigations Unit (CDIU). The Cooperative Disability Investigations (CDI) Program continues to be one of the most successful initiatives, contributing to the integrity of SSA's disability programs. In addition when investigating fraud in other SSA programs, the Social Security Administration may request investigatory assistance from other law enforcement agencies including the Office of the Inspector General as well as state and local authorities.[218]

Restrictions on potentially deceptive communications

Because of the importance of Social Security to millions of Americans, many direct-mail marketers packaged their mailings to resemble official communications from the Social Security Administration, hoping recipients would be more likely to open them. In response, Congress amended the Social Security Act in 1988 to prohibit the private use of the phrase "Social Security" and several related terms in any way that would convey a false impression of approval from the Social Security Administration. The constitutionality of this law (42 U.S.C. § 1140) was upheld in United Seniors Association, Inc. v. Social Security Administration, 423 F.3d 397 (4th Cir. 2005), cert den 547 U.S. 1162; 126 S.Ct. 2346 (2006) (text at Findlaw).[219]

Public economics

Current recipients

 
Social Security – Ratio of Covered Workers to Retirees

The 2011 annual report by the program's Board of Trustees noted the following: in 2010, 54 million people were receiving Social Security benefits, while 157 million people were paying into the fund; of those receiving benefits, 44 million were receiving retirement benefits and 10 million disability benefits. In 2011, there will be 56 million beneficiaries and 158 million workers paying in. In 2010, total income was $781.1 billion and expenditures were $712.5 billion, which meant a total net increase in assets of $68.6 billion. Assets in 2010 were $2.6 trillion, an amount that is expected to be adequate to cover the next ten years. In 2023, total income and interest earned on assets are projected to no longer cover expenditures for Social Security, as demographic shifts burden the system. By 2035, the ratio of potential retirees to working age persons will be 37 percent – there will be less than three potential income earners for every retiree in the population. At this rate the Social Security Trust Fund would be exhausted by 2036.[220]

Saving behavior

Social Security affects the saving behavior of the people in three different ways. The wealth substitution effect occurs when a person saving for retirement recognizes that the Social Security system will take care of him and decreases his expectations about how much he needs to personally save. The retirement effect occurs when a taxpayer saves more each year in an effort to reduce the total number of years he must work to accumulate enough savings before retirement. The bequest effect occurs when a taxpayer recognizes a decrease in resources stemming from the Social Security tax and compensates by increasing personal savings to cover future expected costs of having children.[221]

Reducing cost of living adjustment (COLA)

At present, a retiree's benefit is annually adjusted for inflation to reflect changes in the consumer price index.[222] Some economists argue that the consumer price index overestimates price increases in the economy and therefore is not a suitable metric for adjusting benefits, while others argue that the CPI underestimates the effect of inflation on what retired people actually need to buy to live.

The current cost of living adjustment is based on the consumer price index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers (CPI-W). The Bureau of Labor Statistics routinely checks the prices of 211 different categories of consumption items in 38 geographical areas to compute 8,018 item-area indices. Many other indices are computed as weighted averages of these base indices. CPI-W is based on a market basket of goods and services consumed by urban wage earners and clerical workers. The weights for that index are updated in January of every even-numbered year. People who say the CPI-W overestimates inflation recommend updating the weights each month; this produces the Chained Consumer Price Index for all urban consumers (C-CPI-U). People who say the C-CPI-U [or the unchained CPI for All Urban Consumers (CPI-U)] disadvantages the elderly point out that seniors consume more medical care than younger people, and that the costs of medical care have been rising faster than inflation in other parts of the economy. According to this view, the costs of the things the elderly buy have been rising faster than the market basket averaged to obtain CPI-W, CPI-U or C-CPI-U. Some have recommended fixing this by using a CPI for the Elderly (CPI-E).

In 2003 economics researchers Hobijn and Lagakos estimated that the social security trust fund would run out of money in 40 years using CPI-W and in 35 years using CPI-E.[223]

Consumption

According to a 2016 study in the American Economic Journal: Macroeconomics, the Social Security benefit increases from 1952 to 1991 have a "large, immediate, and significant positive response of consumption".[224]

Health outcomes

According to a 2021 study, the expansion of old-age assistance under the 1935 Social Security Act reduced mortality among the elderly by 30–39%.[225]

See also

References

  1. ^ Social Security Administration, Social Insurance Programs, retrieved 1 November 2016.
  2. ^ Social Security Act of 1935 "Legislative History 1935 Social Security Act". Retrieved November 8, 2006.
  3. ^ [42 USC 7] . Archived from the original on October 12, 2006. Retrieved November 8, 2006.
  4. ^ "Social Security Monthly Statistical Snapshot, November 2022" (PDF). Social Security Administration Research, Statistics, and Policy Analysis.
  5. ^ "THE 2022 ANNUAL REPORT OF THE BOARD OF TRUSTEES OF THE FEDERAL OLD-AGE AND SURVIVORS INSURANCE AND FEDERAL DISABILITY INSURANCE TRUST FUNDS" (PDF). ssa.gov. (PDF) from the original on September 1, 2022.
  6. ^ a b United States Social Security Administration. "Contribution and Benefit Base".
  7. ^ "Social Security: Who Is Covered Under the Program?". Congressional Research Service.
  8. ^ "42 USC 401, Trust Funds". Retrieved November 8, 2006.four
  9. ^ Morton, William R.; Liou, Wayne (September 12, 2017). Social Security: The Trust Funds (PDF). Washington, DC: Congressional Research Service. (PDF) from the original on December 5, 2013. Retrieved October 16, 2017.
  10. ^ a b The 2012 Long-Term Projections for Social Security, Congressional Budget Office, October 2012
  11. ^ a b c d "THE 2020 ANNUAL REPORT OF THE BOARD OF TRUSTEES OF THE FEDERAL OLD-AGE AND SURVIVORS INSURANCE AND FEDERAL DISABILITY INSURANCE TRUST FUNDS" (PDF). ssa.gov. (PDF) from the original on April 25, 2020.
  12. ^ "Contribution and Benefit Base". Social Security Administration. November 2017. Retrieved November 30, 2017.
  13. ^ "Social Security & Medicare Tax Rates". Social Security Administration. Retrieved November 30, 2017.
  14. ^ Social Security History [1] accessed November 7, 2013
  15. ^ Feldstein, Martin; Liebman, Jeffrey B. (2002). "Chapter 32 Social security". Social Security. Handbook of Public Economics. Vol. 4. Elsevier. pp. 2245–2324. doi:10.1016/s1573-4420(02)80011-8. ISBN 9780444823151.
  16. ^ Social Security FAQ [2] accessed February 2, 2017
  17. ^ . Archived from the original on February 10, 2006. Retrieved June 28, 2016.
  18. ^ "Finance, Business, Economics: Huge Old-Age Reserve Fund Under Doughton Bill Gives Treasury Extensive New Financial Powers; Could Be Used to Control Credit Also". The Washington Post. April 25, 1935. p. 23. The social security bill, in its present form, is thus not only a sweeping piece of legislation, but also a far-reaching financial measure. To have investments available for such large reserve funds, the Treasury will have to keep as much of its debt as possible in short-dated maturities, so that securities can be provided by the Old-Age Reserve Account. The existence of this huge reserve, furthermore, will constantly encourage resort to venture in State Socialism.
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Sources

  • Achenbaum, Andrew (1986). Social Security Visions and Revisions.
  • Feldstein, Martin; Jeffrey Liebman (editors) (2002). The Distributional Aspects of Social Security and Social Security Reform. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
  • Kessler-Harris, Alice (2001). In Pursuit of Equity: Women, Men, and the Quest for Economic Citizenship in 20th Century America. New York City: Oxford University Press.
  • Social Security Administration Beneficiaries and costs information
  • Wright, Robert E. (2010). Fubarnomics: A Lighthearted, Serious Look at America's Economic Ills. Buffalo, New York: Prometheus Books.

Further reading

  • Altman, Nancy; Kingson, Eric; Johnston, David Cay (2015). Social Security Works!: Why Social Security Isn't Going Broke and How Expanding It Will Help Us All. The New Press. ISBN 1620970376
  • Achenbaum, W. Andrew. (1986) Social Security: Visions and Revisions (1986), a scholarly history of Social Security and retirement in the USA. online
  • Achenbaum, W. Andrew. (1978) Old age in the new land: The American experience since 1790 (JHU Press, 1978). online
  • Berkowitz, Edward, and Kim McQuaid. (1992) Creating the Welfare State: The Political Economy of Twentieth-Century Reform (UP of Kansas, 1992)
  • Brown, Jeffrey R.; Liebman, Jeffrey B.; Wise, David A. (2009). Social Security Policy in a Changing Environment. University of Chicago Press. ISBN 978-0-226-07648-5.
  • Davis, Owen. (2021) "Employment and Retirement Among Older Workers During the COVID-19 Pandemic." (Schwartz Center for Economic Policy Analysis and Department of Economics, The New School for Social Research, Working Paper Series 6, 2021). online
  • Goda, Gopi Shah, et al. (2022) "The impact of Covid-19 on older workers’ employment and Social Security spillovers." Journal of Population Economics (2022): 1-34. online
  • Jenkins, Shirley; et al., eds. Social Security in International Perspective Essays in Honor of Eveline M. Burns. Columbia University Press, 1969
  • Kim, Jin H. (2019) "Assessing The Adequacy Of Social Security Retirement Benefits Across Race-Ethnicity, Gender, And Age Of Retirement." Innovation in Aging 3.Suppl 1 (2019): S890.
  • Martin, Patricia P.; Weaver, David A. (2005) "Social Security: A Program and Policy History", [23] Social Security Bulletin, Vol. 66 No. 1, 2005
  • Myers, Robert J. Social Security. University of Pennsylvania Press. 1993.
  • Saving, Thomas R. (2008). "Social Security". In David R. Henderson (ed.). Concise Encyclopedia of Economics (2nd ed.). Library of Economics and Liberty. ISBN 978-0865976658. OCLC 237794267.
  • Schieber, Sylvester J., and John B. Shoven. The Real Deal. Yale University Press 1999.
  • Casamatta, G., Cremer, H., & Pestieau P. (2000). "The political economy of Social Security". Scandinavian Journal of Economics 102(3), 503–522.
  • Cogan, J. F. & Mitchell, O. S. (2003). "Perspectives from the President's Commission on Social Security reform". Journal of Economic Perspectives 17(2), 149–172.
  • Galasso, V. (1999). "The U.S. Social Security system: what does sustainability imply?" Review of Economic Dynamics 2(3), 698–730.
  • Galasso, V. & Profeta, P. (2004). "Lessons for an aging society: the political sustainability of social security systems". Economic Policy 19(38), 63–115.
  • Goss, S. C. (2010). "The future financial status of the Social Security program". Social Security Bulletin 70(3), 111–125.
  • Pecchenino, R. A. & Utendorf, K. R. (1999). "Social Security, social welfare and the aging population". Journal of Population Economics 12(4), 607–623.
  • Ci, Zhaoxue. (2022) "Does raising retirement age lead to a healthier transition to retirement? Evidence from the US Social Security Amendments of 1983." Health Economics (2022).

External links

  • Old-Age, Survivors, and Disability Insurance ("OASDI')
    • Social Security Administration
    • Social Security Advisory Board
    • Social Security Retirement Questions FAQ
    • Social Security Internet Myths part 1, Social Security Internet Myths part 2
    • Congressional Budget Office: Social Security Primer (2001)
    • US Government Accountability Office, Social Security Reform: Answers to Key Questions
    • Social Security Act of 1935
    • Social Security Amendments of 1983
  • Calculators
    • Social Security benefit calculators
  • More information
    • Social Security Advisory Board
    • President's Commission to Strengthen Social Security
    • Social Security Death Index Information
  • Articles
    • Genakoplos, John; Mitchell, Olivia S.; Zeldes, Stephen P. (1998). "Would a Privatized Social Security System Really Pay a Higher Rate of Return". In Arnold, R. Douglas; Graetz, Michael J.; Munnell, Alicia H. (eds.). Framing the Social Security Debate: Values, Politics, and Economics. Brookings Institution Press. pp. 137–156. doi:10.3386/w6713. ISBN 0-8157-0153-5.
    • Social Security: Major Decisions in the House and Senate Since 1935 Congressional Research Service (2016)
    • Social Security's Financial Outlook and Reforms: An Independent Evaluation, Jagadeesh Gokhale, member of the Social Security Advisory Board advising Congress and the President
    • A Collection regarding Social Security's progression and perception over time

social, security, united, states, united, states, social, security, commonly, used, term, federal, survivors, disability, insurance, oasdi, program, administered, social, security, administration, original, social, security, enacted, 1935, current, version, am. In the United States Social Security is the commonly used term for the federal Old Age Survivors and Disability Insurance OASDI program and is administered by the Social Security Administration SSA 1 The original Social Security Act was enacted in 1935 2 and the current version of the Act as amended 3 encompasses several social welfare and social insurance programs Private sector workers to social benefits recipient Private sector workers Disability recipients Survivors benefits Retired Social Security The average monthly Social Security benefit for November 2022 was 1 551 4 The total cost of the Social Security program for the year 2021 was 1 145 trillion or about 5 percent of U S GDP 5 Social Security is funded primarily through payroll taxes called Federal Insurance Contributions Act FICA or Self Employed Contributions Act SECA Wage and salary earnings in covered employment up to an amount specifically determined by law see tax rate table below are subject to the Social Security payroll tax Wage and salary earnings above this amount are not taxed In 2022 the maximum amount of taxable earnings is 147 000 6 Social Security is nearly universal with 94 percent of individuals in paid employment in the United States working in covered employment 7 However about 6 6 million state and local government workers in the United States or 28 percent of all state and local workers are not covered by Social Security but rather pension plans operated at the state or local level Social Security payroll taxes are collected by the Internal Revenue Service IRS and are formally entrusted to the Federal Old Age and Survivors Insurance OASI Trust Fund and the Federal Disability Insurance DI Trust Fund the two Social Security Trust Funds 8 9 Social Security revenues exceeded expenditures between 1983 and 2009 10 which increased trust fund balances The retirement of the large baby boom generation however will lower balances Without legislative changes trust fund reserves are projected to be depleted in the years 2034 and 2065 for the OASI and DI funds respectively 11 Should depletion occur incoming payroll tax and other revenue would only be sufficient to pay 76 percent of OASI benefits starting in 2035 and 92 percent of DI benefits starting in 2065 With few exceptions all legal residents working in the United States now have an individual Social Security Number Contents 1 History 2 Major programs 3 Benefits 3 1 Benefit types 3 2 System financing 3 3 Total benefits paid by year 3 4 Primary Insurance Amount and Monthly Benefit Amount calculations 3 5 How workers can get estimates of benefits 3 6 Full retirement age FRA 3 7 Delayed benefits 3 8 Benefits while continuing work 3 9 Spouse s benefit and government pension offsets 3 10 Widow er benefits 3 11 Children s benefits 3 12 Disability 4 Current operation 4 1 Joining and quitting 4 2 Trust fund 4 3 Office of Hearings Operations OHO formerly ODAR or OHA 4 4 Benefit payout comparisons 4 5 International agreements 4 6 Social Security number 4 7 Demographic and revenue projections 4 7 1 Ways to eliminate the projected shortfall 5 Taxation 5 1 Tax on wages and self employment income 5 1 1 Wages not subject to tax 5 2 Federal income taxation of benefits 6 Criticisms 6 1 Claim of discrimination against the poor and the middle class 6 2 Marital status 6 3 Claim that politicians exempted themselves from the tax 6 4 Comparison to a Ponzi scheme 6 5 Estimated net benefits under differing circumstances 7 Current controversies 7 1 Contrast with private pensions 7 2 Contrast with insurance 7 3 Private retirement savings crisis 7 4 Court interpretation of the Act to provide benefits 7 5 Constitutionality 8 Fraud and abuse 8 1 Social Security Number theft 8 2 Fraud in the acquisition and use of benefits 8 3 Restrictions on potentially deceptive communications 9 Public economics 9 1 Current recipients 9 2 Saving behavior 9 3 Reducing cost of living adjustment COLA 9 4 Consumption 9 5 Health outcomes 10 See also 11 References 11 1 Sources 12 Further reading 13 External linksHistory EditMain article History of Social Security in the United States Historical Social Security Tax RatesMaximum Salary FICA or SECA taxes paid onYear MaximumEarningstaxed OASDITax rate MedicareTax Rate Year MaximumEarningstaxed OASDITax rate MedicareTax Rate1937 3 000 2 1978 17 700 10 1 2 0 1938 3 000 2 1979 22 900 10 16 2 1 1939 3 000 2 1980 25 900 10 16 2 1 1940 3 000 2 1981 29 700 10 7 2 6 1941 3 000 2 1982 32 400 10 8 2 6 1942 3 000 2 1983 35 700 10 8 2 6 1943 3 000 2 1984 37 800 11 4 2 6 1944 3 000 2 1985 39 600 11 4 2 7 1945 3 000 2 1986 42 000 11 4 2 9 1946 3 000 2 1987 43 800 11 4 2 9 1947 3 000 2 1988 45 000 12 12 2 9 1948 3 000 2 1989 48 000 12 12 2 9 1949 3 000 2 1990 51 300 12 4 2 9 1950 3 000 3 1991 53 400 12 4 2 9 1951 3 600 3 1992 55 500 12 4 2 9 1952 3 600 3 1993 57 600 12 4 2 9 1953 3 600 3 1994 60 600 12 4 2 9 1954 3 600 4 1995 61 200 12 4 2 9 1955 4 200 4 1996 62 700 12 4 2 9 1956 4 200 4 1997 65 400 12 4 2 9 1957 4 200 4 5 1998 68 400 12 4 2 9 1958 4 200 4 5 1999 72 600 12 4 2 9 1959 4 800 5 2000 76 200 12 4 2 9 1960 4 800 6 2001 80 400 12 4 2 9 1961 4 800 6 2002 84 900 12 4 2 9 1962 4 800 6 25 2003 87 000 12 4 2 9 1963 4 800 7 25 2004 87 900 12 4 2 9 1964 4 800 7 25 2005 90 000 12 4 2 9 1965 4 800 7 25 2006 94 200 12 4 2 9 1966 6 600 7 7 0 7 2007 97 500 12 4 2 9 1967 6 600 7 8 1 0 2008 102 000 12 4 2 9 1968 7 800 7 6 1 2 2009 106 800 12 4 2 9 1969 7 800 8 4 1 2 2010 106 800 12 4 2 9 1970 7 800 8 4 1 2 2011 106 800 10 4 2 9 1971 7 800 9 2 1 2 2012 110 100 10 4 2 9 1972 9 000 9 2 1 2 2013 113 700 12 4 2 9 1973 10 800 9 7 2 0 2014 117 000 12 4 2 9 1974 13 200 9 9 1 8 2015 118 500 12 4 2 9 1975 14 100 9 9 1 8 2016 118 500 12 4 2 9 1976 15 300 9 9 1 8 2017 127 200 12 4 2 9 1977 16 500 9 9 1 8 2018 128 400 12 4 2 9 Notes Tax rate is the sum of the OASDI and Medicare rate for employers and workers In 2011 and 2012 the OASDI tax rate on workers was set temporarily to 4 2 while the employers OASDI rate remained at 6 2 giving 10 4 total rate Medicare taxes of 2 9 now 2013 have no taxable income ceiling Sources Social Security Administration 12 13 Social Security timeline 14 1935 The 37 page Social Security Act signed August 14 by President Franklin D Roosevelt The legislation included Unemployment Insurance Aid to Dependent Children Old Age Insurance OAI and Old Age Assistance OAA The old age insurance program gradually developed into the Old Age Survivors and Disability Insurance program which is what Americans typically associate Social Security with 15 1936 The new Social Security Board contracts the Post Office Department in late November to distribute and collect applications 1937 More than twenty million Social Security Cards issued Ernest Ackerman receives first lump sum payout 17 cents in January 16 1939 Two new categories of beneficiaries added spouse and minor children of a retired worker 1940 First monthly benefit check issued to Ida May Fuller for 22 54 1950 Benefits increased and cost of living adjustments COLAs made at irregular intervals 77 COLA in 1950 1954 Disability program added to Social Security 1960 Flemming v Nestor Landmark U S Supreme Court ruling that affirmed that Congress has the power to amend and revise the schedule of benefits The Court also ruled that recipients have no contractual right to receive payments 1961 Early retirement age lowered to age 62 at reduced benefits 1965 Medicare health care benefits added to Social security twenty million joined in three years 1966 Medicare tax of 0 7 added to pay for increased Medicare expenses 1972 Supplemental Security Income SSI program federalized and assigned to Social Security Administration 1975 Automatic cost of living adjustments COLAs mandated 1977 COLA adjustments brought back to sustainable levels 1980 Amendments are made in disability program to help solve some problems of fraud 1983 Taxation of Social Security benefits introduced new federal hires required to be under Social Security retirement age increased for younger workers to 66 and 67 years 1984 Congress passed the Disability Benefits Reform Act modifying several aspects of the disability program 1996 Drug addiction or alcoholism disability benefits could no longer be eligible for disability benefits The Earnings limit doubled exemption amount for retired Social Security beneficiaries Terminated SSI eligibility for most non citizens 1997 The law requires the establishment of federal standards for state issued birth certificates and requires SSA to develop a prototype counterfeit resistant Social Security card still being worked on 1997 Temporary Assistance for Needy Families TANF replaces Aid to Families with Dependent Children AFDC program placed under SSA 1997 State Children s Health Insurance Program for low income citizens SCHIP added to Social Security Administration 2003 Voluntary drug benefits with supplemental Medicare insurance payments from recipients added 2009 No Social Security Benefits for Prisoners Act of 2009 signed A limited form of the Social Security program began during President Franklin D Roosevelt s first term as a measure to implement social insurance during the Great Depression of the 1930s 17 The Act was an attempt to limit unforeseen and unprepared for dangers in modern life including old age disability poverty unemployment and the burdens of widow er s with and without children Opponents however decried the proposal as socialism 18 19 20 In a Senate Finance Committee hearing Senator Thomas Gore D OK asked Secretary of Labor Frances Perkins Isn t this socialism She said it was not but he continued Isn t this a teeny weeny bit of socialism 21 The provisions of Social Security have been changing since the 1930s shifting in response to economic worries as well as coverage for the poor dependent children spouses survivors and the disabled 22 By 1950 debates moved away from which occupational groups should be included to get enough taxpayers to fund Social Security to how to provide more benefits 23 Changes in Social Security have reflected a balance between promoting equality and efforts to provide adequate and affordable protection for low wage workers 24 Major programs EditThe larger and better known programs under the Social Security Act are Federal Old Age Retirement Survivors and Disability Insurance OASDI Temporary Assistance for Needy Families TANF Health Insurance for Aged and Disabled Medicare Grants to States for Medical Assistance Programs for low income citizens Medicaid State Children s Health Insurance Program for low income citizens SCHIP Supplemental Security Income SSI The Social Security Administration SSA administers two of these programs OASDI and SSI Benefits EditBenefit types Edit The Social Security program in the United States pays benefits to three broad categories of individuals retired individuals and some family members disabled persons and some family members and survivors Within these broad categories the program defines more specific types of beneficiaries For example spouses and divorced spouses are distinct categories with somewhat different eligibility requirements Survivor benefits include several categories including aged widow er s aged surviving divorced spouses disabled widow er s disabled surviving divorced spouses paternal and maternal orphans and widow er s caring for minor or disabled children As of 2020 there were about 65 million individuals receiving Social Security benefits 25 Individuals receiving Retirement Insurance Benefits constitute the largest group of beneficiaries with 49 3 million retired workers or family members receiving monthly payments Social Security Disability Insurance benefits were paid to 8 2 million disabled workers and 1 5 million dependents children and spouses About 5 9 million individuals including 1 9 million children received some type of survivor benefit from Social Security Some individuals qualify for more than one type of benefit but program rules on dual entitlement generally prevent the payment of two full benefits For example a person eligible for a retirement benefit and a higher spouse benefit will receive the full retirement benefit and a partial spouse benefit The dual entitlement rules disproportionately affect women 6 9 million women in 2019 26 because historically they have earned less than current or former husbands and this leads to retirement benefits for women that are often lower than the full spouse benefit for which they qualify In addition Social Security beneficiaries with low income and limited resources may qualify for additional income through the Supplemental Security Income SSI program SSI is separate from the Social Security program but it is administered by SSA In 2020 2 7 million Social Security beneficiaries received additional income through SSI 27 System financing Edit Social Security payments to beneficiaries which totaled 1 05 trillion in 2019 are generally financed by payroll taxes on workers in Social Security covered employment trust fund reserves and some income taxation of Social Security benefits The payroll tax rate totals 12 4 percent of earnings up to the taxable maximum the rate is 6 2 percent from workers and 6 2 percent from employers and 12 4 percent from the self employed The OASI Trust Fund and the DI Trust Fund are legally separate For employees and employers combined the OASI payroll taxes are 10 6 percent and the DI payroll taxes are 1 8 percent In 2019 trust fund reserves for the OASI and DI programs were 2 8 trillion and 93 billion respectively Income taxation of some Social Security benefits brought in 34 9 billion for OASI and 1 6 billion for DI in 2019 11 Assessments of system financing often focus on the combined programs together OASI and DI and focus on key measures such as trust fund depletion date actuarial balance over a 75 year period and comparisons of program costs to U S GDP Regarding trust fund depletion the Social Security Trustees based on technical work by the Social Security Administration s actuaries project the combined OASDI trust fund will be depleted in 2035 11 The Penn Wharton Budget Model University of Pennsylvania projects depletion in 2032 2034 depending on the shape of the economic recovery in the U S following the COVID 19 pandemic 28 With regard to actuarial balance the Social Security Trustees estimate a 75 year actuarial deficit of 3 21 percent of payroll This is approximately the total payroll tax increase that would be necessary to keep the system solvent for 75 years The figure is designed to illustrate the size of the deficit Legislation could close the deficit in ways other than raising the payroll tax rate Because taxable earnings are a fraction of GDP sometimes the system s finances are put into context by using GDP Social Security s cost are currently 5 0 percent of U S GDP Program costs will rise to 5 9 percent of GDP by 2038 and will approximately remain at that level through 2094 11 In the past legislation has been enacted to prevent trust fund depletion Should the trust funds be depleted Social Security would still have revenue coming into the system from payroll taxes The Social Security trustees estimate that revenue would be sufficient to pay 79 percent of the program s benefits There has been debate about a trust fund depletion scenario however regarding whether monthly benefits would be lowered or whether full amounts would be paid but not on a timely basis 29 The amount of the monthly Social Security benefit to which a worker is entitled currently depends upon the earnings record they have paid FICA or SECA taxes on and upon the age at which the retiree chooses to begin receiving benefits That said the U S Supreme Court ruled in Flemming v Nestor 1960 that no one has a contractual right to Social Security benefits Medicare is a separate program from Social Security although disabled and aged 65 or older Social Security beneficiaries qualify for Medicare The financing for Medicare United States is also based on payroll taxes trust fund reserves and the taxation of some Social Security benefits Total benefits paid by year Edit Year Beneficiaries Dollars 30 1937 53 236 1 278 0001938 213 670 10 478 0001939 174 839 13 896 0001940 222 488 35 000 0001950 3 477 243 961 000 0001960 14 844 589 11 245 000 0001970 26 228 629 31 863 000 0001980 35 584 955 120 511 000 0001990 39 832 125 247 796 000 0001995 43 387 259 332 553 000 0001996 43 736 836 347 088 000 0001997 43 971 086 361 970 000 0001998 44 245 731 374 990 000 0001999 44 595 624 385 768 000 0002000 45 414 794 407 644 000 0002001 45 877 506 431 949 000 0002002 46 444 317 453 746 000 0002003 47 038 486 470 778 000 0002004 47 687 693 493 263 000 0002005 48 434 436 520 748 000 0002006 49 122 624 546 238 000 0002007 49 864 838 584 939 000 0002008 50 898 244 615 344 000 0002009 52 522 819 675 482 000 0002010 54 031 968 701 609 000 0002011 55 404 480 725 103 000 0002012 56 758 185 774 791 000 0002013 57 978 610 812 259 000 0002014 59 007 158 848 463 000 0002015 60 907 307 886 278 000 0002016 60 907 307 911 384 000 0002017 61 903 360 941 499 000 0002018 62 906 222 988 635 000 0002019 64 064 496 1 047 930 000 000Primary Insurance Amount and Monthly Benefit Amount calculations Edit Main article Primary Insurance Amount Workers in Social Security covered employment pay FICA Federal Insurance Contributions Act or SECA Self Employed Contributions Act taxes and earn quarters of coverage if earnings are above minimum amounts specified in the law Workers with 40 quarters of coverage QC are fully insured and eligible for retirement benefits Retirement benefit amounts depend upon the average of the person s highest 35 years of adjusted or indexed earnings A person s payroll taxable earnings from earlier years are adjusted for economy wide wage growth using the national average wage index AWI and then averaged 31 If the worker has fewer than 35 years of covered earnings these non contributory years are assigned zero earnings The sum of the highest 35 years of adjusted or indexed earnings divided by 420 35 years times 12 months per year produces a person s Average Indexed Monthly Earnings or AIME 31 The AIME is then used to calculate the Primary Insurance Amount or PIA For workers who turn 62 in 2021 the PIA computation formula is a 90 percent of the first 996 of average indexed monthly earnings plus b 32 percent of average indexed monthly earnings between 996 and 6 002 plus c 15 percent of average indexed monthly earnings over 6 002 32 For workers who turn 62 in the future the 90 32 and 15 percent factors in the computation formula will remain the same but the dollar amounts in the formula called bend points will increase by wage growth in the national economy as measured by the AWI Because the AIME and the PIA calculation incorporate the AWI Social Security benefits are said to be wage indexed Because wages typically grow faster than prices the PIAs for workers turning 62 in the future will tend to be higher in real terms but similar relative to average earnings in the economy at the time age 62 is attained Monthly benefit amounts are based on the PIA Once the PIA is computed it is indexed for price inflation over time Thus Social Security monthly benefit amounts retain their purchasing power throughout a person s retirement years A worker who first starts receiving a retirement benefit at the full retirement age receives a monthly benefit amount equal to 100 percent of the PIA A worker who claims the retirement benefit before the full retirement age receives a reduced monthly benefit amount and a worker who claims at an age after the full retirement age up to age 70 receives an increased monthly amount 33 The 90 32 and 15 percent factors in the PIA computation lead to higher replacement rates for persons with lower career earnings For example a retired individual whose average earnings are below the first bend point can receive a monthly benefit at the full retirement age that equals 90 percent of the person s average monthly earnings before retirement The table shows replacement rates for workers who turned 62 in 2013 Benefit CalculationsSocial Security Benefits vs 35 year Averaged SalaryPercent of Average Indexed Monthly salary AIME Earnings Salary eligible for in Social Security PIA Benefits 34 AIME Salaryper month SingleBenefits MarriedBenefits SingleBenefitsat age 62 MarriedBenefits at age 62 791 90 135 68 101 1 000 78 117 58 88 2 000 55 82 41 62 3 000 47 71 35 53 4 000 43 65 33 49 5 000 40 60 30 45 6 000 36 54 27 41 7 000 33 50 25 32 8 000 31 46 23 35 9 000 29 44 22 33 10 000 28 42 21 31 11 000 23 34 17 26 12 000 21 32 16 24 13 000 19 29 15 22 Married spousal benefits may be reduced or eliminated if spousereceiving a government pension Spouse still eligible for Medicare 35 Maximum percent of salary received before Medicare or tax deductions Retirement benefits are calculated at full retirement ages Age 62 retirement benefits are assumed to be 75 of full benefits Approximately AIME salary 90 present salary Approximate only contact Social Security for more detailed calculations The PIA computation formula for disabled workers parallels that for retired workers except the AIME is based on fewer years to reflect disablement before age 62 The monthly benefit amount of a disabled worker is 100 percent of PIA Benefits for spouses children and widow er s depend on the PIAs of a spouse or a deceased spouse Aged spouse and divorced spouse beneficiaries can receive up to 50 percent of the PIA Survivor benefit rates are higher and aged widow er s and aged surviving divorced spouses can receive 100 percent of the PIA Federal state and local employees who have elected when they could NOT to pay FICA taxes are eligible for a reduced FICA benefits and full Medicare coverage if they have more than forty quarters of qualifying Social Security covered work To minimize the Social Security payments to those who have not contributed to FICA for 35 years and are eligible for federal state and local benefits which are usually more generous Congress passed the Windfall Elimination Provision WEP 36 The WEP provision will not eliminate all Social Security or Medicare eligibility if the worker has 40 quarters of qualifying income but calculates the benefit payments by reducing the 90 multiplier in the first PIA bendpoint to 40 85 depending on the number of Years of Coverage 37 Foreign pensions are subject to WEP A special minimum benefit based on an alternative PIA calculation is available for some workers with long careers but low earnings However it is rarely higher than the regularly computed PIA and thus few workers qualify for the special minimum benefit Only 32 000 individuals received the special minimum benefit in 2019 38 The benefits someone is eligible for are potentially so complicated that potential retirees should consult the Social Security Administration directly for advice Many questions are addressed and at least partially answered on many online publications and online calculators Main article Retirement Insurance Benefits How workers can get estimates of benefits Edit The Social Security Administration SSA provides benefit estimates to workers through the Social Security Statement The Statement can be accessed online by opening an online account with SSA called my Social Security With that account workers can also construct what if scenarios helping them to understand the effect on monthly benefits if they work additional years or delay the start of retirement benefits The my Social Security account also offers other services allowing individuals to request a replacement Social Security card or check the status of an application 39 A printed copy of the Social Security Statement is mailed to workers age 60 or older In 2021 SSA began producing Retirement Ready fact sheets available online and as part of the online Statement that tailor retirement planning information to different age groups young middle age and older workers 40 SSA also has a Benefits Calculators web page with several stand alone online calculators that help individuals estimate their benefits and prepare for retirement 41 These include benefit calculators for spouses calculators for persons affected by the Windfall Elimination Provision or the Government Pension Offset and calculators to determine a person s full retirement age or the effect of the earnings test on benefits SSA also provides a life expectancy calculator to help with retirement planning Full retirement age FRA Edit If a person first claims a retirement benefit at the full retirement age FRA the individual will receive a monthly benefit amount equal to 100 percent of the individual s primary insurance amount PIA If first claimed before the FRA the monthly benefit amount is smaller than 100 percent of PIA and if claimed after the FRA the monthly amount is higher than 100 percent of PIA Sometimes the full retirement age is referred to as the normal retirement age Historically the FRA was age 65 The 1983 Amendments to the Social Security Act gradually increased the FRA and for individuals born in 1960 or later the FRA is 67 The early retirement age age 62 has not changed but the monthly benefit amount paid at the early retirement age is lower if a person has a higher FRA For example when the FRA was age 65 the early retirement benefit was 80 percent of the worker s PIA For a person with a FRA of 67 the early retirement benefit is 70 percent of PIA Year of birth Full retirement age 42 1937 and prior 651938 65 and 2 months1939 65 and 4 months1940 65 and 6 months1941 65 and 8 months1942 65 and 10 months1943 to 1954 661955 66 and 2 months1956 66 and 4 months1957 66 and 6 months1958 66 and 8 months1959 66 and 10 months1960 and later 67Individuals who first claim retirement benefits after the FRA and up to age 70 receive delayed retirement credits that increase the monthly benefit amount by 8 percent per year of delayed claiming For example if a person has a FRA of 67 and waits until age 70 to claim retirement benefits the individual s monthly benefit amount will be 124 percent of PIA Age when filing Change in benefits from full amount 43 44 62 30 63 25 64 20 65 13 3 66 6 767 68 8 69 16 70 24 Based on a full retirement age of 67When a retirement beneficiary dies a widow er or surviving divorced spouse is generally eligible for a monthly benefit amount equal to that received by the retirement beneficiary Thus a worker who delays retirement increases both the monthly benefit amount of the retirement benefit and ultimately the benefit a survivor receives Many press articles guides and studies have focused on whether it is optimal to claim benefits at the full retirement age or some other age The Social Security Administration produces a publication called When to Start Receiving Retirement Benefits that is designed to help individuals understand the issues involved in deciding when to begin benefits 33 The Center for Retirement Research at Boston College produced a guide designed to help individuals make informed claiming decisions 45 Between 1985 and 2015 claiming of retirement benefits at the early retirement age became much less common and claiming at the full retirement age or later more common In 2019 1 in 4 individuals claimed at the early retirement age 46 From 2009 through 2019 the percentage of men claiming retirement benefits after the full retirement age increased from 4 1 percent to 16 2 percent 47 The effects of the COVID 19 pandemic and ensuing recession and recovery on benefit claiming however are not yet known 46 The full retirement age is relevant for some benefit types other than retirement benefits For example aged spouses and aged survivors who claim spouse or survivor benefits before the full retirement age receive reduced spouse or survivor benefits The increase in the full retirement age from the 1983 Amendments to the Social Security Act was phased in at a slightly different pace for survivor benefits and the full retirement age is 67 for survivors born in 1962 or later 48 Many aged survivors however are well past the full retirement age when the worker dies and thus can receive full survivor benefits immediately upon the worker s death For some types of Social Security benefits benefits are not reduced or increased based on the age the benefits are first claimed For example a full monthly benefit amount 100 percent of PIA is paid to disabled workers regardless of the age at which benefits start At the full retirement age the Social Security Administration reclassifies disabled workers as retired workers but the individual s monthly benefit amount is not affected Delayed benefits Edit Delayed Social Security Increasesfor retiring after full retirement age 49 Yearof birth Yearly increase Monthly increase1933 34 5 5 11 24 of 1 1935 36 6 0 1 2 of 1 1937 38 6 5 13 24 of 1 1939 40 7 0 7 12 of 1 1941 42 7 5 5 8 of 1 1943 8 0 2 3 of 1 If a worker delays receiving Social Security retirement benefits until after they reach full retirement age 49 the benefit will increase by two thirds of one percent of the PIA per month 50 After age 70 there are no more increases as a result of delaying benefits Social Security uses an average survival rate at your full retirement age to prorate the increase in the amount of benefit increase so that the total benefits are roughly the same whenever a person retires Women may benefit more than men from this delayed benefit increase since the average survival rates are based on both men and women and women live approximately three years longer than men The other consideration is that workers have only a limited number of years of good health left after they reach full retirement age and unless they enjoy their job they may be passing up an opportunity to do something else they may enjoy doing while they are still relatively healthy Benefits while continuing work Edit Due to changing needs or personal preferences a person may go back to work after retiring In this case it is possible to get Social Security retirement or survivors benefits and work at the same time A worker who is of full retirement age or older may with spouse keep all benefits after taxes regardless of earnings But if this worker or the worker s spouse are younger than full retirement age and receiving benefits and earn too much the benefits will be reduced If working under full retirement age for the entire year and receiving benefits Social Security deducts 1 from the worker s benefit payments for every 2 earned above the annual limit of 15 120 2013 Deductions cease when the benefits have been reduced to zero and the worker will get one more year of income and age credit slightly increasing future benefits at retirement For example if a person was receiving benefits of 1 230 month the average benefit paid or 14 760 a year and have an income of 29 520 year above the 15 120 limit 44 640 year that person would lose all 14 760 of your benefits If a person made 1 000 more than 15 200 year they would only lose 500 in benefits People got no benefits for the months they worked until the 1 deduction for 2 income squeeze is satisfied First social security checks are delayed for several months the first check may be only a fraction of the full amount The benefit deductions change in the year a person reaches full retirement age and are still working Social Security deducts only one dollar in benefits for every three a person earns above 40 080 in 2013 for that year and has no deduction thereafter The income limits change presumably for inflation year by year 51 Spouse s benefit and government pension offsets Edit The spouse or divorced spouse of a retirement beneficiary is eligible for a Social Security spouse benefit if the spouse or divorced spouse is 62 or older The benefit amount is equal to 50 percent of the retirement beneficiary s Primary Insurance Amount if the spouse claims the benefit at the full retirement age or later If a person is eligible for both a retirement benefit based the person s own work in Social Security covered employment and a spouse benefit based on a spouse s work in covered employment SSA will pay a total amount approximately equal to the higher of the two benefits For example if at the full retirement age a spouse claims a retirement benefit of 300 and a spouse benefit of 450 SSA will pay the person a 300 retirement benefit and a 150 dollar partial spouse benefit for a total benefit of 450 A spouse is eligible after a one year duration of marriage requirement is met and a divorced spouse is eligible for spousal benefits if the marriage lasted for at least ten years and the person applying is not currently married Payment of benefits to a divorced spouse does not reduce the Social Security benefits of the retired worker or family members of the retired worker such as the worker s current spouse A divorced person can claim spousal benefits once the former spouse is eligible for retirement benefits regardless of whether the former spouse has claimed those retirement benefits Spousal benefits are reduced if claimed before the full retirement age The reduction is 25 36 of 1 per month for the first 36 months and 5 12 of 1 for each additional month earlier than the full retirement age This typically works out to between 50 and 32 5 of the retirement beneficiary s Primary Insurance Amount There is no increase for starting spousal benefits after the full retirement age Although Social Security rules are gender neutral spousal benefits are disproportionately paid to women 52 Because of trends in marriage and workforce participation retirement benefits are projected to become increasingly important for women but spouse and survivor benefits will still be common 53 Because spouse benefits are only a 50 percent benefit and because divorced individuals do not share resources with a current husband or wife divorced spouse beneficiaries have poverty rates that are quite high About 29 percent of divorced spouse beneficiaries are in poverty compared to only about 5 4 percent of married spouse beneficiaries 54 There is a Social Security government pension offset 55 that will reduce or eliminate any spousal or ex spouse or widow er s benefits if the spouse or widow er is also receiving a government federal state or local pension from work that did not require paying Social Security taxes The basic rule is that Social Security benefits will be reduced by two thirds of the spouse s or widow er s government pension If the spouse s or widow er s government pension exceeds 150 of the normal spousal or widow er s benefit the spousal benefit is eliminated For example a normal spousal or widow er s benefit of 1 000 month would be reduced to 0 00 if the spouse or widow er s if already drawing a non FICA taxed government pension of 1 500 month or more per month Pensions from work where Social Security taxes were paid do not reduce Social Security spousal or widow er s benefits Pensions received from foreign countries do not cause GPO however a foreign pension may be subject to the WEP 56 Widow er benefits Edit If a worker covered by Social Security dies a surviving spouse can receive survivors benefits if a 9 month duration of marriage is met If a widow er waits until Full Retirement Age they are eligible for 100 percent of their deceased spouse s PIA 57 If the death of the worker was accidental the duration of marriage test may be waived 58 A divorced spouse may qualify if the duration of marriage was at least ten full years and the widow er is not currently married or remarried after attainment of age 60 50 if disabled and eligible for specific types of benefits 59 prior to the date of marriage A father or mother of any age with a child age 16 or under or a disabled adult child in his or her care may be eligible for benefits The earliest age for a non disabled widow er s benefit is age 60 If the worker received retirement benefits prior to death the benefit amount may not exceed the amount the worker was receiving at the time of death or 82 5 of the PIA of the deceased worker whichever is more 60 If the surviving spouse starts benefits before full retirement age there is an actuarial reduction 61 If the worker earned delayed retirement credits by waiting to start benefits after their full retirement age the surviving spouse will have those credits applied to their benefit 62 If the worker died before the year of attainment of age 62 the earnings will be indexed to the year in which the surviving spouse attained age 60 63 Children s benefits Edit Children of a retired disabled or deceased worker receive benefits as a dependent or survivor if they are under the age of 18 or as long as attending primary or secondary school up to age 19 years and 2 months or are over the age of 18 and were disabled before the age of 22 61 64 The benefit for a child on a living parent s record is 50 of the PIA for a surviving child the benefit is 75 of the PIA The benefit amount may be reduced if total benefits on the record exceed the family maximum In Astrue v Capato 2012 the Supreme Court unanimously held that children conceived after a parent s death by in vitro fertilization procedure are not entitled to Social Security survivors benefits if the laws of the state in which the parent s will was signed do not provide for such benefits 65 Disability Edit This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Social Security United States news newspapers books scholar JSTOR November 2007 Learn how and when to remove this template message A worker who has worked long enough and recently enough based on quarters of coverage within the recent past to be covered can receive disability benefits These benefits start after five full calendar months of disability regardless of his or her age The eligibility formula requires a certain number of credits based on earnings to have been earned overall and a certain number within the ten years immediately preceding the disability but with more lenient provisions for younger workers who become disabled before having had a chance to compile a long earnings history The worker must be unable to continue in his or her previous job and unable to adjust to other work with age education and work experience taken into account furthermore the disability must be long term lasting twelve months expected to last twelve months resulting in death or expected to result in death 66 As with the retirement benefit the amount of the disability benefit payable depends on the worker s age and record of covered earnings Supplemental Security Income SSI uses the same disability criteria as the insured social security disability program but SSI is not based upon insurance coverage Instead a system of means testing is used to determine whether the claimants income and net worth fall below certain income and asset thresholds Severely disabled children may qualify for SSI Standards for child disability are different from those for adults Disability determination at the Social Security Administration has created the largest system of administrative courts in the United States Depending on the state of residence a claimant whose initial application for benefits is denied can request reconsideration or a hearing before an Administrative Law Judge ALJ Such hearings sometimes involve participation of an independent vocational expert VE or medical expert ME as called upon by the ALJ Reconsideration involves a re examination of the evidence and in some cases the opportunity for a hearing before a non attorney disability hearing officer The hearing officer decides the case and provides justification for the finding in writing If the claimant is denied at the reconsideration stage s he may request a hearing before an Administrative Law Judge In some states SSA has implemented a pilot program that eliminates the reconsideration step and allows claimants to appeal an initial denial directly to an Administrative Law Judge Because the number of applications for Social Security disability is very large approximately 650 000 applications per year the number of hearings requested by claimants often exceeds the capacity of Administrative Law Judges The number of hearings requested and availability of Administrative Law Judges varies geographically across the United States In some areas of the country it is possible for a claimant to have a hearing with an Administrative Law Judge within 90 days of the request In other areas waiting times of 18 months are not uncommon After the hearing the Administrative Law Judge ALJ issues a decision in writing The decision can be Fully Favorable the ALJ finds the claimant disabled as of the date that s he alleges in the application through the present Partially Favorable the ALJ finds the claimant disabled at some point but not as of the date alleged in the application OR the ALJ finds that the claimant was disabled but has improved or Unfavorable the ALJ finds that the claimant was not disabled at all Claimants can appeal decisions to Social Security s Appeals Council which is in Virginia The Appeals Council does not hold hearings it accepts written briefs Response time from the Appeals Council can range from twelve weeks to more than three years Claimant who disagrees with the Appeals Council s decision can appeal the case in the federal district court As in most federal court cases an unfavorable district court decision can be appealed to the appropriate United States Court of Appeals and an unfavorable appellate court decision can be appealed to the United States Supreme Court The Social Security Administration has maintained its goal for judges to resolve 500 700 cases per year but Administrative Law Judges struggle to meet this goal While 81 of Administrative Law Judges met this productivity level in 2019 only 18 achieved this case disposition target in 2020 67 Office of Hearing Operations staffing and work procedure disruptions related to the COVID 19 pandemic have doubtlessly contributed to lower Administrative Law Judge productivity in 2020 The debate about the social security system in the United States has been ongoing for decades and there is much concern about its sustainability 68 69 Current operation EditJoining and quitting Edit Obtaining a Social Security number for a child is voluntary 70 Further there is no general legal requirement that individuals join the Social Security program unless they want or have to work Under normal circumstances FICA taxes or SECA taxes will be collected on all wages About the only way to avoid paying either FICA or SECA taxes is to join a religion that does not believe in insurance such as the Amish or a religion whose members have taken a vow of poverty see IRS publication 517 71 and 4361 72 Federal workers employed before 1987 various state and local workers including those in some school districts who had their own retirement and disability programs were given the one time option of joining Social Security Many employees and retirement and disability systems opted to keep out of the Social Security system because of the cost and the limited benefits It was often much cheaper to obtain much higher retirement and disability benefits by staying in their original retirement and disability plans 73 Now only a few of these plans allow new hires to join their existing plans without also joining Social Security In 2004 the Social Security Administration estimated that 96 of all U S workers were covered by the system with the remaining 4 mostly a minority of government employees enrolled in public employee pensions and not subject to Social Security taxes due to historical exemptions 74 It is possible for railroad employees to get a coordinated retirement and disability benefits The U S Railroad Retirement Board or RRB is an independent agency in the executive branch of the United States government created in 1935 75 to administer a social insurance program providing retirement benefits to the country s railroad workers Railroad retirement Tier I payroll taxes are coordinated with social security taxes so that employees and employers pay Tier I taxes at the same rate as social security taxes and have the same benefits In addition both workers and employers pay Tier II taxes about 6 2 in 2005 which are used to finance railroad retirement and disability benefit payments that are over and above social security levels Tier II benefits are a supplemental retirement and disability benefit system that pays 0 875 times years of service times average highest five years of employment salary in addition to Social Security benefits The FICA taxes are imposed on nearly all workers and self employed persons Employers are required 76 to report wages for covered employment to Social Security for processing Forms W 2 and W 3 Some specific wages are not part of the Social Security program discussed below Internal Revenue Code provisions section 3101 77 imposes payroll taxes on individuals and employer matching taxes Section 3102 78 mandates that employers deduct these payroll taxes from workers wages before they are paid Generally the payroll tax is imposed on everyone in employment earning wages as defined in 3121 79 of the Internal Revenue Code 80 and also taxes 81 net earnings from self employment 82 Trust fund Edit Main article Social Security Trust Fund Social Security taxes are paid into the Social Security Trust Fund maintained by the U S Treasury technically the Federal Old Age and Survivors Insurance Trust Fund as established by 42 U S C 401 a Current year expenses are paid from current Social Security tax revenues When revenues exceed expenditures as they did between 1983 and 2009 10 the excess is invested in special series non marketable U S government bonds Thus the Social Security Trust Fund indirectly finances the federal government s general purpose deficit spending In 2007 the cumulative excess of Social Security taxes and interest received over benefits paid out stood at 2 2 trillion 83 Some regard the Trust Fund as an accounting construct with no economic significance Others argue that it has specific legal significance because the Treasury securities it holds are backed by the full faith and credit of the U S government which has an obligation to repay its debt 84 The Social Security Administration s authority to make benefit payments as granted by Congress extends only to its current revenues and existing Trust Fund balance i e redemption of its holdings of Treasury securities Therefore Social Security s ability to make full payments once annual benefits exceed revenues depends in part on the federal government s ability to make good on the bonds it has issued to the Social Security trust funds As with any other federal obligation the federal government s ability to repay Social Security is based on its power to tax and borrow and the commitment of Congress to meet its obligations In 2009 the Office of the Chief Actuary of the Social Security Administration calculated an unfunded obligation of 15 1 trillion for the Social Security program The unfunded obligation is the difference between the future cost of Social Security based on several demographic assumptions such as mortality work force participation immigration and age expectancy and total assets in the Trust Fund given the expected contribution rate through the current scheduled payroll tax This unfunded obligation is expressed in present value dollars and is a part of the Fund s long range actuarial estimates not necessarily a certainty of what will occur in the long run An Actuarial Note to the calculation says the term obligation is used in lieu of the term liability because liability generally indicates a contractual obligation as in the case of private pensions and insurance that cannot be altered by the plan sponsor without the agreement of the plan participants 85 86 Office of Hearings Operations OHO formerly ODAR or OHA Edit On August 8 2017 Acting Commissioner Nancy A Berryhill informed employees that the Office of Disability Adjudication and Review ODAR would be renamed to Office of Hearings Operations OHO 87 The hearing offices had been known as ODAR since 2006 and the Office of Hearings and Appeals OHA before that OHO administers the ALJ hearings for the Social Security Administration 88 Administrative Law Judges ALJs conduct hearings and issue decisions After an ALJ decision the Appeals Council considers requests for review of ALJ decisions and acts as the final level of administrative review for the Social Security Administration the stage at which exhaustion could occur a prerequisite for federal court review 89 Benefit payout comparisons Edit Some federal state local and education government employees pay no Social Security but have their own retirement disability systems that nearly always pay much better retirement and disability benefits than Social Security These plans typically require vesting working 5 10 years for the same employer before becoming eligible for retirement But their retirement typically depends on only the average of the best 3 10 years salaries times some retirement factor typically 0 875 3 0 times years employed This retirement benefit can be a reasonably good 75 85 of salary retirement at close to the monthly salary they were last employed at For example if a person joined the University of California retirement system at age 25 and worked for 35 years they could receive 87 5 2 5 35 of their average highest three year salary with full medical coverage at age 60 Police and firefighters who joined at 25 and worked for 30 years could receive 90 3 0 30 of their average salary and full medical coverage at age 55 These retirements have cost of living adjustments COLA applied each year but are limited to a maximum average income of 350 000 year or less Spousal survivor benefits are available at 100 67 of the primary benefits rate for 8 7 to 6 7 reduction in retirement benefits respectively 90 UCRP retirement and disability plan benefits are funded by contributions from both members and the university typically 5 of salary each and by the compounded investment earnings of the accumulated totals These contributions and earnings are held in a trust fund that is invested The retirement benefits are much more generous than Social Security but are believed to be actuarially sound The main difference between state and local government sponsored retirement systems and Social Security is that the state and local retirement systems use compounded investments that are usually heavily weighted in the stock market securities which historically have returned more than 7 0 year on average despite some years with losses 91 Short term federal government investments may be more secure but pay much lower average percentages Nearly all other federal state and local retirement systems work in a similar fashion with different benefit retirement ratios Some plans are now combined with Social Security and are piggy backed on top of Social Security benefits For example the current Federal Employees Retirement System which covers the vast majority of federal civil service employees hired after 1986 combines Social Security a modest defined benefit pension 1 1 per year of service and the defined contribution Thrift Savings Plan The current Social Security formula used in calculating the benefit level primary insurance amount or PIA is progressive vis a vis lower average salaries Anyone who worked in OASDI covered employment and other retirement would be entitled to both the alternative non OASDI pension and an Old Age retirement benefit from Social Security Because of their limited time working in OASDI covered employment the sum of their covered salaries times inflation factor divided by 420 months yields a low adjusted indexed monthly salary over 35 years AIME The progressive nature of the PIA formula would in effect allow these workers to also get a slightly higher Social Security Benefit percentage on this low average salary Congress passed in 1983 the Windfall Elimination Provision to minimize Social Security benefits for these recipients The basic provision is that the first salary bracket 0 791 month 2013 has its normal benefit percentage of 90 reduced to 40 90 see Social Security for the exact percentage The reduction is limited to roughly 50 of what a person would be eligible for if they had always worked under OASDI taxes The 90 benefit percentage factor is not reduced if a person has 30 or more years of substantial earnings 92 The average Social Security payment of 1 230 month 14 760 year in 2013 93 is only slightly above the federal poverty level for one 11 420 yr and below the poverty guideline of 15 500 yr for two 94 For this reason financial advisers often encourage those who have the option to do so to supplement their Social Security contributions with private retirement plans One good supplemental retirement plan option is an employer sponsored 401 K or 403 B plan when they are offered by an employer 58 of American workers have access to such plans 95 Many of these employers will match a portion of an employee s savings dollar for dollar up to a certain percentage of the employee s salary Even without employer matches individual retirement accounts IRAs are portable self directed tax deferred retirement accounts that offer the potential to substantially increase retirement savings Their limitations include the financial literacy to tell a good investment account from a less advantageous one the savings barrier faced by those who are in low wage employment or burdened by debt the requirement of self discipline to allot from an early age the required percentage of salary into good investment account s and the self discipline needed to leave it there to earn compound interest until needed after retirement Financial advisers often suggest that long term investment horizons should be used as historically short term investment losses self correct and most investments continue to deliver good average investment returns 91 The IRS has tax penalties for withdrawals from IRAs 401 K s etc before the age of 59 1 2 and requires mandatory withdrawals once the retiree reaches 70 other restrictions may also apply on the amount of tax deferred income one can put in the account s 96 For people who have access to them self directed retirement savings plans have the potential to match or even exceed the benefits earned by federal state and local government retirement plans International agreements Edit People sometimes relocate from one country to another either permanently or on a limited time basis This presents challenges to businesses governments and individuals seeking to ensure future benefits or having to deal with taxation authorities in multiple countries To that end the Social Security Administration has signed treaties often referred to as Totalization Agreements with other social insurance programs in various foreign countries 97 Overall these agreements serve two main purposes First they eliminate dual Social Security taxation the situation that occurs when a worker from one country works in another country and is required to pay Social Security taxes to both countries on the same earnings Second the agreements help fill gaps in benefit protection for workers who have divided their careers between the United States and another country The following countries have signed totalization agreements with the SSA and the date the agreement became effective 98 Italy November 1 1978 Germany December 1 1979 Switzerland November 1 1980 Belgium July 1 1984 Norway July 1 1984 Canada August 1 1984 United Kingdom January 1 1985 Sweden January 1 1987 Spain April 1 1988 France July 1 1988 Portugal August 1 1989 Netherlands November 1 1990 Austria November 1 1991 Finland November 1 1992 Ireland September 1 1993 Luxembourg November 1 1993 Greece September 1 1994 South Korea April 1 2001 Chile December 1 2001 Australia October 1 2002 Japan October 1 2005 Denmark October 1 2008 Czech Republic January 1 2009 Poland March 1 2009 Slovak Republic May 1 2014 Mexico Signed on June 29 2004 but not yet in effect Social Security number Edit Main article Social Security number A side effect of the Social Security program in the United States has been the near universal adoption of the program s identification number the Social Security number as the de facto U S national identification number The social security number or SSN is issued pursuant to section 205 c 2 of the Social Security Act codified as 42 U S C 405 c 2 The government originally stated that the SSN would not be a means of identification 99 but currently a multitude of U S entities use the Social Security number as a personal identifier These include government agencies such as the Internal Revenue Service as well as the military in addition to private agencies such as banks colleges and universities health insurance companies and employers Although the Social Security Act itself does not require a person to have a Social Security Number SSN to live and work in the United States 100 the Internal Revenue Code does generally require the use of the social security number by individuals for federal tax purposes The social security account number issued to an individual for purposes of section 205 c 2 A of the Social Security Act shall except as shall otherwise be specified under regulations of the Secretary of the Treasury or his delegate be used as the identifying number for such individual for purposes of this title 101 dd Importantly most parents apply for Social Security numbers for their dependent children in order to 102 include them on their income tax returns as a dependent Everyone filing a tax return as taxpayer or spouse must have a Social Security Number or Taxpayer Identification Number TIN since the IRS is unable to process returns or post payments for anyone without an SSN or TIN The Privacy Act of 1974 was in part intended to limit usage of the Social Security number as a means of identification Paragraph 1 of subsection a of section 7 of the Privacy Act an uncodified provision states in part 1 It shall be unlawful for any Federal State or local government agency to deny to any individual any right benefit or privilege provided by law because of such individual s refusal to disclose his social security account number dd However the Social Security Act provides It is the policy of the United States that any State or political subdivision thereof may in the administration of any tax general public assistance driver s license or motor vehicle registration law within its jurisdiction utilize the social security account numbers issued by the Commissioner of Social Security for the purpose of establishing the identification of individuals affected by such law and may require any individual who is or appears to be so affected to furnish to such State or political subdivision thereof or any agency thereof having administrative responsibility for the law involved the social security account number or numbers if he has more than one such number issued to him by the Commissioner of Social Security 103 dd Further paragraph 2 of subsection a of section 7 of the Privacy Act provides in part 2 the provisions of paragraph 1 of this subsection shall not apply with respect to dd A any disclosure which is required by Federal statute or dd dd B the disclosure of a social security number to any Federal State or local agency maintaining a system of records in existence and operating before January 1 1975 if such disclosure was required under statute or regulation adopted prior to such date to verify the identity of an individual 104 dd dd The exceptions under section 7 of the Privacy Act include the Internal Revenue Code requirement that social security numbers be used as taxpayer identification numbers for individuals 105 Demographic and revenue projections Edit This section s factual accuracy may be compromised due to out of date information The reason given is Several of these projected dates have passed and some language referring to data as current latest most recent etc is as old as 2005 or undated Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information September 2021 In each year since 1982 OASDI tax receipts interest payments and other income have exceeded benefit payments and other expenditures for example by more than 150 billion in 2004 106 As the baby boomers move out of the work force and into retirement however expenses will come to exceed tax receipts and then after several more years will exceed all OASDI trust income including interest At that point the system will begin drawing on its trust fund Treasury Notes and will continue to pay benefits at the current levels until the Trust Fund is exhausted In 2013 the OASDI retirement insurance fund collected 731 1 billion and spent 645 5 billion the disability program DI collected 109 1 billion and spent 140 3 billion Medicare HI collected 243 0 billion and spent 266 8 billion and Supplementary Medical Insurance SMI collected 293 9 billion and spent 307 4 billion In 2013 all Social Security programs except the retirement trust fund OASDI spent more than they brought in and relied on significant withdrawals from their respective trust funds to pay their bills The retirement OASDI trust fund of 2 541 trillion is expected to be emptied by 2033 by one estimate as new retirees become eligible to join The disability DI trust fund s 153 9 billion will be exhausted by 2018 the Medicare HI trust fund of 244 2 billion will be exhausted by 2023 and the Supplemental Medical Insurance SMI trust fund will be exhausted by 2020 if the present rate of withdrawals continues even sooner if they increase The total Social Security expenditures in 2013 were 1 360 billion dollars which was 8 4 of the 16 200 billion GNP 2013 and 37 0 of the federal expenditures of 3 684 billion including a 971 0 billion deficit 107 108 All other parts of the Social Security program medicare HI disability DI and Supplemental Medical SMI trust funds are already drawing down their trust funds and are projected to go into deficit in about 2020 if the present rate of withdrawals continue 109 As the trust funds are exhausted either benefits will have to be cut fraud minimized or taxes increased In 2005 this exhaustion of the OASDI Trust Fund was projected to occur in 2041 by the Social Security Administration 110 or by 2052 by the Congressional Budget Office CBO 111 Thereafter however the projection for the exhaustion date of this event was moved up slightly after the 2008 2009 recession worsened the U S economy s financial picture The 2011 OASDI Trustees Report stated Annual cost exceeded non interest income in 2010 and is projected to continue to be larger throughout the remainder of the 75 year valuation period Nevertheless from 2010 through 2022 total trust fund income including interest income is more than is necessary to cover costs so trust fund assets will continue to grow during that time Beginning in 2023 trust fund assets will diminish until they become exhausted in 2036 Non interest income is projected to be sufficient to support expenditures at a level of 77 percent of scheduled benefits after trust fund exhaustion in 2036 and then to decline to 74 percent of scheduled benefits in 2085 112 In 2007 the Social Security Trustees suggested that either the payroll tax could increase to 16 41 percent in 2041 and steadily increased to 17 60 percent in 2081 or a cut in benefits by 25 percent in 2041 and steadily increased to an overall cut of 30 percent in 2081 113 The Social Security Administration projects that the demographic situation will stabilize The cash flow deficit in the Social Security system will have leveled off as a share of the economy This projection has come into question Some demographers argue that life expectancy will improve more than projected by the Social Security Trustees a development that would make solvency worse Some economists believe future productivity growth will be higher than the current projections by the Social Security Trustees In this case the Social Security shortfall would be smaller than currently projected Tables published by the government s National Center for Health Statistics show that life expectancy at birth was 47 3 years in 1900 rose to 68 2 by 1950 and reached 77 3 in 2002 The latest annual report of the Social Security Agency SSA trustees projects that life expectancy will increase just six years in the next seven decades to 83 in 2075 A separate set of projections by the Census Bureau shows more rapid growth 114 The Census Bureau projection is that the longer life spans projected for 2075 by the Social Security Administration will be reached in 2050 Other experts however think the past gains in life expectancy cannot be repeated and add that the adverse effect on the system s finances may be partly offset if health improvements or reduced retirement benefits induce people to stay in the workforce longer Actuarial science of the kind used to project the future solvency of social security is subject to uncertainty The SSA actually makes three predictions optimistic midline and pessimistic until the late 1980s it made four The Social Security crisis that was developing prior to the 1983 reforms resulted from midline projections that turned out to be too optimistic It has been argued that the overly pessimistic projections of the mid to late 1990s were partly the result of the low economic growth according to actuary David Langer assumptions that resulted in pushing back the projected exhaustion date from 2028 to 2042 with each successive Trustee s report citation needed During the heavy boom years of the 1990s the midline projections were too pessimistic Obviously projecting out 75 years is a significant challenge and as such the actual situation might be much better or much worse than predicted Unfortunately SSA s projection technology remained the same over many decades despite fast progress in the same period in the literature on statistical forecasting methods leading to large systematic forecasting biases 115 116 The Social Security Advisory Board has on three occasions since 1999 appointed a Technical Advisory Panel to review the methods and assumptions used in the annual projections for the Social Security trust funds The most recent report of the Technical Advisory Panel released in June 2008 with a copyright date of October 2007 includes a number of recommendations for improving the Social Security projections 117 118 As of December 2013 update under current law the Congressional Budget Office reported that the Disability Insurance trust fund will be exhausted in fiscal year 2017 and the Old Age and Survivors Insurance trust fund will be exhausted in 2033 119 Costs of Social Security have already started to exceed income since 2018 This means the trust funds have already begun to be empty and will be fully depleted in the near future As of 2018 the projections made by the Social Security Administration estimates that Social Security program as a whole will deplete all reserves by 2034 120 Increased spending for Social Security will occur at the same time as increases in Medicare as a result of the aging of the baby boomers One projection illustrates the relationship between the two programs From 2004 to 2030 the combined spending on Social Security and Medicare is expected to rise from 8 of national income gross domestic product to 13 Two thirds of the increase occurs in Medicare 121 In an annually issued report released in August 2021 the U S Treasury Department announced that the Old Age and Survivors Trust Fund was projected to be able to pay scheduled benefits until 2033 while the Disability Insurance Trust Fund was projected to be able to pay its benefits through 2057 1 year and 8 years earlier respectively than the previous report found 122 In June 2022 the Treasury Department issued an updated report for the Old Age and Survivors Insurance and Disability Insurance Trust Funds with revised projections for their ability to pay scheduled benefits to 2034 and 2097 respectively due to accelerated recovery from the COVID 19 recession 123 Ways to eliminate the projected shortfall Edit Social Security is predicted to start running out of having enough money to pay all prospective retirees at today s benefit payouts by 2034 120 Lift the payroll ceiling The payroll ceiling is now adjusted for inflation 124 Robert Reich former United States Secretary of Labor suggests lifting the ceiling on income subject to Social Security taxes which is 142 800 as of 2021 125 Increase Social Security taxes If workers and employers each paid 7 6 up from today s 6 2 it would eliminate the financing gap altogether This 1 4 increase 2 8 for self employed dubious discuss has over 60 support in surveys conducted by the National Academy of Social Insurance NASI 126 failed verification Raise the retirement age s Raising the early retirement option from age 62 to 64 would help to reduce Social Security benefit payouts citation needed Means test benefits A phase out of Social Security benefits for those who already have income over 48 000 year 4 000 month would eliminate over 20 of the funding gap This is not very popular with only 31 of surveyed households favoring it 126 Change the cost of living adjustment COLA Several proposals have been discussed Effects of COLA reductions would be cumulative over time and would affect some groups more than others Poverty rates would increase 127 Reduce benefits for new retirees If Social Security benefits were reduced by 3 to 5 for new retirees about 18 to 30 percent of the funding gap would be eliminated citation needed Average in more working years Social Security benefits are now based on an average of a worker s 35 highest paid salaries with zeros averaged in if there are fewer than 35 years of covered wages The averaging period could be increased to 38 or 40 years which could potentially reduce the deficit by 10 to 20 respectively citation needed Require all newly hired people to join Social Security Over 90 of all workers already pay FICA and SECA taxes so there is not much to gain by this There would be an early increase in Social Security income that would be partially offset later by the benefits they might collect when they retire citation needed Taxation Edit Tax on wages and self employment income Edit Benefits are funded by taxes imposed on wages of employees and self employed persons As explained below in the case of employment the employer and employee are each responsible for one half of the Social Security tax with the employee s half being withheld from the employee s pay check In the case of self employed persons i e independent contractors the self employed person is responsible for the entire amount of Social Security tax The portion of taxes collected from the employee for Social Security are referred to as trust fund taxes and the employer is required to remit them to the government These taxes take priority over everything and represent the only debts of a corporation or LLC that can impose personal liability upon its officers or managers A sole proprietor and officers of a corporation and managers of an LLC can be held personally liable for non payment of the income tax and social security taxes whether or not actually collected from the employee 128 The Federal Insurance Contributions Act FICA codified in the Internal Revenue Code imposes a Social Security withholding tax equal to 6 20 of the gross wage amount up to but not exceeding the Social Security Wage Base 97 500 for 2007 102 000 for 2008 and 106 800 for 2009 2010 and 2011 The same 6 20 tax is imposed on employers For 2011 and 2012 the employee s contribution was reduced to 4 2 while the employer s portion remained at 6 2 129 130 In 2012 the wage base increased to 110 100 131 In 2013 the wage base increased to 113 700 132 For each calendar year for which the worker is assessed the FICA contribution the SSA credits those wages as that year s covered wages The income cutoff is adjusted yearly for inflation and other factors A separate payroll tax of 1 45 of an employee s income is paid directly by the employer and an additional 1 45 deducted from the employee s paycheck yielding a total tax rate of 2 90 There is no maximum limit on this portion of the tax This portion of the tax is used to fund the Medicare program which is primarily responsible for providing health benefits to retirees The Social Security tax rates from 1937 2010 can be accessed on the Social Security Administration s 133 website The combined tax rate of these two federal programs is 15 30 7 65 paid by the employee and 7 65 paid by the employer In 2011 2012 it temporarily dropped to 13 30 5 65 paid by the employee and 7 65 paid by the employer For self employed workers who technically are not employees and are deemed not to be earning wages for federal tax purposes the self employment tax imposed by the Self Employment Contributions Act of 1954 codified as Chapter 2 of Subtitle A of the Internal Revenue Code 26 U S C 1401 1403 is 15 3 of net earnings from self employment 134 In essence a self employed individual pays both the employee and employer share of the tax although half of the self employment tax the employer share is deductible when calculating the individual s federal income tax 135 136 If an employee has overpaid payroll taxes by having more than one job or switching jobs during the year the excess taxes will be refunded when the employee files his federal income tax return Any excess taxes paid by employers however are not refundable to the employers By Congressional Budget Office CBO calculations the lowest income quintile 0 20 and second quintile 21 40 of households in the U S pay an average income tax of 9 3 and 2 6 and Social Security taxes of 8 3 and 7 9 respectively By CBO calculations the household incomes in the first quintile and second quintile have an average Total Federal Tax rate of 1 0 and 3 8 respectively 137 Wages not subject to tax Edit Workers are not required to pay Social Security taxes on wages from certain types of work 138 A student working part time for a university enrolled at least half time at the same university and their relationship with the university is primarily an educational one 139 A student who is a household employee for a college club fraternity or sorority and is enrolled and regularly attending classes at a university 140 A child under age 18 or under age 21 for domestic service who is employed by their parent 141 142 A person who receives payments from a state or a local government for services performed to be relieved from unemployment 143 An incarcerated person who works for the state or local government that operates the prison in which the person is incarcerated 144 145 146 A person at an institution who works for the state of local government that operates the institution 144 145 An employee of a state or local government who was hired on a temporary basis in response to a specific unforeseen fire storm snow earthquake flood or a similar emergency and the employee is not intended to become a permanent employee 147 148 A newspaper carrier under age 18 149 A real estate agent or salespeople s compensation if substantially all the compensation is directly related to sales or other output rather than to the number of hours worked and there is a written contract stating that the individual will not be treated as an employee for federal tax purposes 150 151 The compensation is exempt if 150 151 Employees of state or local government entities in Alaska California Colorado Illinois Louisiana Maine Massachusetts Nevada Ohio and Texas 152 Earnings as a council member of a federally recognized Indian tribe 153 154 A fishing worker who is a member of a federally recognized Indian tribe that has recognized fishing rights 155 154 A nonresident alien who is an employee of a foreign government on wages paid in their official capacities as foreign government employees 156 A nonresident alien who is employed by a foreign employer as a crew member working on a foreign ship or foreign aircraft 156 157 A nonresident alien who is a student scholar professor teacher trainee researcher physician au pair or summer camp worker and is temporarily in the United States in F 1 J 1 M 1 Q 1 or Q 2 nonimmigrant status for wages paid to them for services that are allowed by their visa status and are performed to carry out the purposes the visa status 156 A nonresident alien who is an employee of an international organization on wages paid by the international organization 156 A nonresident alien who is on an H 2A visa 156 A nonresident alien who works in Guam is a resident of the Philippines and is on an H 2A H 2B or H 2R visa 156 A member of certain religious groups such as the Mennonites and the Amish who consider insurance to be a lack of trust in God and see it as their religious duty to provide for members who are sick disabled or elderly 158 159 160 A person who is temporarily working outside their country of origin and is covered under a tax treaty between their country and the United States 161 Net annual earnings from self employment of less than 400 Wages received for service as an election worker if less than 1 400 a year in 2008 Wages received for working as a household employee if less than 1 700 per year in 2009 2010 Federal income taxation of benefits Edit Originally the benefits received by retirees were not taxed as income Beginning in tax year 1984 with the Reagan era reforms to repair the system s projected insolvency retirees with incomes over 25 000 in the case of married persons filing separately who did not live with the spouse at any time during the year and for persons filing as single or with combined incomes over 32 000 if married filing jointly or in certain cases any income amount if married filing separately from the spouse in a year in which the taxpayer lived with the spouse at any time generally saw part of the retiree benefits subject to federal income tax 162 In 1984 the portion of the benefits potentially subject to tax was 50 163 The Deficit Reduction Act of 1993 set the portion to 85 Moreover since the taxable income threshold is not indexed to inflation the portion of beneficiaries social security payments subject to income tax has risen significantly in real terms since the threshold was set in 1984 Criticisms EditClaim of discrimination against the poor and the middle class Edit For people in the bottom fifth of the earnings distribution the ratio of benefits to taxes is almost three times as high as it is for those in the top fifth 164 Workers must pay 12 4 percent including a 6 2 percent employer contribution on their wages below the Social Security Wage Base 142 800 in 2021 but no tax on income in excess of this amount 6 165 Therefore high earners pay a lower percentage of their total income because of the income caps because of this and the fact there is no tax on unearned income social security taxes are often viewed as being regressive However benefits are adjusted to be significantly more progressive even when accounting for differences in life expectancy According to the non partisan Congressional Budget Office for people in the bottom fifth of the earnings distribution the ratio of benefits to taxes is almost three times as high as it is for those in the top fifth 164 Despite its regressive tax rate Social Security benefits are calculated using a progressive benefit formula that replaces a much higher percentage of low income workers pre retirement income than that of higher income workers although these low income workers pay a higher percentage of their pre retirement income 166 Supporters of the current system also point to numerous studies that show that relative to high income workers Social Security disability and survivor benefits paid on behalf of low income workers more than offset any retirement benefits that may be lost because of shorter life expectancy this offset would apply only at a population level 167 168 169 Other research asserts that survivor benefits allegedly an offset actually exacerbate the problem because survivor benefits are denied to single individuals including widow er s married fewer than nine months except in certain situations 170 divorced widow er s married fewer than ten years 171 and co habiting or same sex couples unless they are legally married in their state of residence 172 173 174 175 176 Unmarried individuals and minorities tend to be less wealthy 177 Social Security s benefit formula provides 90 of average indexed monthly earnings AIME below the first bend point of 791 month 32 of AIME between the first and second bend points 791 to 4781 month and 15 of AIME in excess of the second bend point up to the Ceiling cap of 113 700 in 2013 178 The low income bias of the benefit calculation means that a lower paid worker receives a much higher percentage of his or her salary in benefit payments than higher paid workers In fact a married low salaried worker can receive over 100 of their salary in benefits after retiring at the full retirement age High salaried workers receive 43 or less of their salary in benefits despite having paid into the system at the same rate see benefit calculations above To minimize the impact of Social Security taxes on low salaried workers the Earned Income Tax Credit and the Child Care Tax Credit were passed which largely refund the FICA and or SECA payments of low salaried workers through the income tax system 137 By Congressional Budget Office CBO calculations the lowest income quintile 0 20 and second quintile 21 40 of households in the U S pay an average federal income tax of 9 3 and 2 6 of income and Social Security taxes of 8 3 and 7 9 of income respectively By CBO calculations the household incomes in the first and second quintiles have an average total federal tax rate of 1 0 and 3 8 respectively 137 However these groups also have by far the smallest percentage of American household incomes the first quintile earns just 3 2 of all income while the second quintile earns only 8 4 of all income 179 Higher income retirees will have to pay income taxes on 85 of their Social Security benefits and 100 on all other retirement benefits they may have 31 Marital status Edit The Social Security Act defines the rules for determining marital relationships for SSI recipients The act requires that if a couple is cohabitating they should be considered married for purposes of the SSI program 180 Consequently if the claimant is found disabled and found to be holding out this claimant will be entitled to reduced or no SSI benefits 181 However the Social Security Act does not accept that a claimant holding out as husband or wife should be entitled of Survivor Retirement or Widows benefits when the claimant s husband or wife dies 182 SSA rules and regulations about marital status either prohibit SRDI program or reduce SSI program benefits to indigent claimants Claim that politicians exempted themselves from the tax Edit Critics of Social Security have said that the politicians who created Social Security exempted themselves from having to pay the Social Security tax 183 When the federal government created Social Security all federal employees including the president and members of Congress were exempt from having to pay the Social Security tax and they received no Social Security benefits This law was changed by the Social Security Amendments of 1983 which brought within the Social Security system all members of Congress the president and the vice president federal judges and certain executive level political appointees as well as all federal employees hired in any capacity on or after January 1 1984 184 Many state and local government workers however are exempt from Social Security taxes because they contribute instead to alternative retirement systems set up by their employers 185 Comparison to a Ponzi scheme Edit See also Social Security debate in the United States Pyramid or Ponzi scheme claims Critics have drawn parallels between Social Security and Ponzi schemes 186 187 arguing that the sustenance of Social Security is due to continuous contributions over time One difference between a traditional Ponzi scheme and Social Security is that while both may have similar structures in particular a sustainability problem when the number of new people paying in is declining they have differing degrees of transparency In the case of a traditional Ponzi scheme the fact that there is no return generating mechanism other than contributions from new entrants is obscured 188 whereas the Social Security scheme is designed to have payouts openly underwritten by incoming tax revenue and the interest on the Treasury bonds held by or for the Social Security scheme 189 Private sector Ponzi schemes are also vulnerable to collapse because they cannot force new entrants to contribute whereas participation in the Social Security program is mandatory upon beginning one s first job in the United States In connection with these and other issues Robert E Wright calls Social Security a pyramid scheme rather than a true Ponzi scheme in his book Fubarnomics Estimated net benefits under differing circumstances Edit Single men with different wages and retirement dates In 2004 Urban Institute economists C Eugene Steuerle and Adam Carasso created a Web based Social Security benefits calculator 190 Using this calculator it is possible to estimate net Social Security benefits i e estimated lifetime benefits minus estimated lifetime FICA taxes paid for different types of recipients In the book Democrats and Republicans Rhetoric and Reality Joseph Fried used the calculator to create graphical depictions of the estimated net benefits of men and women who were at different wage levels single and married with stay at home spouses and retiring in different years These graphs vividly show that generalizations about Social Security benefits may be of little predictive value for any given worker due to the wide disparity of net benefits for people at different income levels and in different demographic groups For example the graph below Figure 168 shows the impact of wage level and retirement date on a male worker As income goes up net benefits get smaller even negative Impact of gender and wage levels on net SS benefits However the impact is much greater for the future retiree in 2045 than for the current retiree 2005 The male earning 95 000 per year and retiring in 2045 is estimated to lose over 200 000 by participating in the Social Security system 191 In the next graph Figure 165 the depicted net benefits are averaged for people turning age 65 anytime during the years 2005 through 2045 In other words the disparities shown are not related to retirement However we do see the impact of gender and wage level Because women tend to live longer they generally collect Social Security benefits for a longer time As a result they get a higher net benefit on average no matter what the wage level 192 Net lifetime SS benefits of married men and women where only one person works The next image Figure 166 shows estimated net benefits for married men and women at different wage levels In this particular scenario it is assumed that the spouse has little or no earnings and thus will be entitled to collect a spousal retirement benefit According to Fried Two significant factors are evident First every column in Figure 166 depicts a net benefit that is higher than any column in Figure 165 In other words the average married person with a stay at home spouse gets a greater benefit per FICA tax dollar paid than does the average single person no matter what the gender or wage level Second there is only limited progressivity among married workers with stay at home spouses Review Figure 166 carefully The net benefits drop as the wage levels increase from 50 000 to 95 000 however they increase as the wage levels grow from 5 000 to 50 000 In fact net benefits are lowest for those earning just 5 000 per year 193 The last graph shown Figure 167 is a combination of Figures 165 and 166 In this graph it is very clear why generalizations about the value of Social Security benefits are meaningless At the 95 000 wage level a married person could be a big winner getting net benefits of about 165 000 On the other hand he could lose an estimated 152 000 in net benefits if he remains single Altogether there is a swing of over 300 000 based upon the marriage decision and the division of earnings between the spouses In addition there is a large disparity between the high net benefits of the married person earning 95 000 165 152 versus the relatively low net benefits of the man or woman earning just 5 000 30 025 or 41 890 depending on gender In other words the high earner in this scenario gets a far greater return on his FICA tax investment than does the low earner 194 Comparison of net SS benefits In the book How Social Security Picks Your Pocket other factors affecting Social Security net benefits are identified Generally people who work for more than 35 years get a lower net benefit all other factors being equal People who do not live long after retirement age get a much lower net benefit Finally people who derive a high percentage of income from non wage sources get high Social Security net benefits because they appear to be poor when they are not The progressive benefit formula for Social Security is blind to the income a worker may have from non wage sources such as spousal support dividends and interest or rental income 195 Current controversies EditMain article Social Security debate United States Proposals to reform of the Social Security system have led to heated debate centering on funding of the program In particular proposals to privatize funding have caused great controversy Contrast with private pensions Edit Although Social Security is sometimes compared to private pensions the two systems are different in a number of respects It has been argued that Social Security is an insurance plan as opposed to a retirement plan Unlike a pension for example Social Security pays disability benefits A private pension fund accumulates the money paid into it eventually using those reserves to pay pensions to the workers who contributed to the fund and a private system is not universal Social Security cannot prefund by investing in marketable assets such as equities because federal law prohibits it from investing in assets other than those backed by the U S government As a result its investments to date have been limited to special non negotiable securities issued by the U S Treasury although some citation needed argue that debt issued by the Federal National Mortgage Association and other quasi governmental organizations could meet legal standards Social Security cannot by law invest in private equities although some other countries such as Canada and some states permit their pension funds to invest in private equities As a universal system Social Security generally operates as a pipeline through which current tax receipts from workers are used to pay current benefits to retirees survivors and the disabled When there is an excess of taxes withheld over benefits paid by law this excess is invested in Treasury securities not in private equities as described above Two broad categories of private pension plans are defined benefit pension plans and defined contribution pension plans Of these two Social Security is more similar to a defined benefit pension plan In a defined benefit pension plan the benefits ultimately received are based on some sort of pre determined formula such as one based on years worked and highest salary earned Defined benefit pension plans generally do not include separate accounts for each participant By contrast in a defined contribution pension plan each participant has a specific account with funds put into that account by the employer or the participant or both and the ultimate benefit is based on the amount in that account at the time of retirement Some have proposed that the Social Security system be modified to provide for the option of individual accounts in effect to make the system at least in part more like a defined contribution pension plan Specifically on February 2 2005 President George W Bush made Social Security a prominent theme of his State of the Union Address 196 He described the Social Security system as headed for bankruptcy and outlined in general terms a proposal based on partial privatization Critics responded that privatization would require huge new government borrowing to fund benefit payments during the transition years See Social Security debate United States Both defined benefit and defined contribution private pension plans are governed by the Employee Retirement Income Security Act ERISA which requires employers to provide minimum levels of funding to support defined benefits pensions The purpose is to protect the workers from corporate mismanagement and outright bankruptcy although in practice many private pension funds have fallen short in recent years In terms of financial structure the current Social Security system is analogous to an underfunded defined benefit pension underfunded meaning not that it is in trouble but that its savings are not enough to pay future benefits without collecting future tax revenues Contrast with insurance Edit Besides the argument over whether the returns on Social Security contributions should or can be compared to returns on private investment instruments there is the question of whether the contributions are nonetheless analogous to pooled insurance premiums charged by for profit commercial insurance companies to maintain and generate a return on a risk pool of funds 197 Like any insurance program Social Security spreads risk as the program protects workers and covered family members against loss of income from the wage earner s retirement disability or death For example a worker who becomes disabled at a young age could receive a large return relative to the amount they contributed in FICA before becoming disabled since disability benefits can continue for life As in private insurance plans everyone in the particular insurance pool is insured against the same risks but not everyone will benefit to the same extent The analogy to insurance however is limited 198 by the fact that paying FICA taxes creates no legal right to benefits 199 and by the extent to which Social Security is in fact funded by FICA taxes During 2011 and 2012 for example FICA tax revenue was insufficient to maintain Social Security s solvency without transfers from general revenues These transfers added to the general budget deficit like general program spending 200 201 202 Private retirement savings crisis Edit While inflation adjusted stock market values generally rose from 1978 to 1997 from 1998 through 2007 they were higher than in March 2013 203 This has caused workers supplemental retirement plans such as 401 k s to perform substantially more poorly than expected when current retirees were investing the bulk of their savings in them 204 205 In 2010 the median household retirement account balance for workers aged 55 to 64 was 120 000 which will provide only a trivial supplement to Social Security benefits but about a third of households had no retirement savings at all 206 75 of Americans nearing retirement age had less than 30 000 in their retirement accounts which Forbes called the greatest retirement crisis in American history 207 Court interpretation of the Act to provide benefits Edit The United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit has indicated that the Social Security Act has a moral purpose and should be liberally interpreted in favor of claimants when deciding what counted as covered wages for purposes of meeting the quarters of coverage requirement to make a worker eligible for benefits 208 That court has also stated T he regulations should be liberally applied in favor of beneficiaries when deciding a case in favor of a felon who had his disability payments retroactively terminated upon incarceration 209 According to the court that the Social Security Act should be liberally construed in favor of those seeking its benefits can not be doubted 210 The hope behind this statute is to save men and women from the rigors of the poor house as well as from the haunting fear that such a lot awaits them when journey s end is near 211 Constitutionality Edit The constitutionality of Social Security is intricately linked to the evolving nature of Supreme Court jurisprudence on federal power the 20th century saw a dramatic increase in allowed congressional action When Social Security was first passed there were significant questions over its constitutionality as the Court had found another pension scheme the original Railroad Retirement Act to violate the due process clause of the Fifth Amendment Some such as University of Chicago law professor Richard Epstein and Harvard University professor Robert Nozick have argued that Social Security should be unconstitutional 212 213 citation needed In the 1937 U S Supreme Court case of Helvering v Davis 214 the Court examined the constitutionality of Social Security when George Davis of the Edison Electric Illuminating Company of Boston sued in connection with the Social Security tax The U S District Court for the District of Massachusetts first upheld the tax The District Court judgment was reversed by the Circuit Court of Appeals Commissioner Guy Helvering of the Bureau of Internal Revenue now the Internal Revenue Service took the case to the Supreme Court and the Court upheld the validity of the tax During the 1930s President Franklin Delano Roosevelt was in the midst of promoting the passage of a large number of social welfare programs under the New Deal and the Supreme Court struck down many of those programs such as the Railroad Retirement Act and the National Recovery Act as unconstitutional Modified versions of the affected programs were afterwards approved by the Court including Social Security When Helvering v Davis was argued before the Court the larger issue of constitutionality of the old age insurance portion of Social Security was not decided The case was limited to whether the payroll tax was a suitable use of Congress s taxing power Despite this no serious challenges regarding the system s constitutionality are now being litigated and Congress s spending power may be more coextensive as shown in cases like South Dakota v Dole 215 during the Reagan Administration Fraud and abuse EditSocial Security Number theft Edit Because Social Security Numbers have become useful in identity theft and other forms of crime various schemes have been perpetrated to acquire valid Social Security Numbers and related identity information In February 2006 the Social Security Administration received several reports of an email message being circulated addressed to Dear Social Security Number And Card owner and purporting to be from the Social Security Administration The message informs the reader that someone illegally is using your Social Security number and assuming your identity and directs the reader to a website designed to look like Social Security s Internet website I am outraged that someone would target an unsuspecting public in this manner said Commissioner Jo Anne B Barnhart I have asked the Inspector General to use all the resources at his command to find and prosecute whoever is perpetrating this fraud 216 Once directed to the phony website the individual is reportedly asked to confirm his or her identity with Social Security and bank information Specific information about the individual s credit card number expiration date and PIN is then requested Whether on our online website or by phone Social Security will never ask you for your credit card information or your PIN Commissioner Jo Anne B Barnhart reported Social Security Administration Inspector General O Carroll recommended people always take precautions when giving out personal information You should never provide your Social Security number or other personal information over the Internet or by telephone unless you are extremely confident of the source to whom you are providing the information O Carroll said 216 Fraud in the acquisition and use of benefits Edit Given the vast size of the program fraud sometimes occurs The Social Security Administration has its own investigatory unit 217 to combat and prevent fraud the Cooperative Disability Investigations Unit CDIU The Cooperative Disability Investigations CDI Program continues to be one of the most successful initiatives contributing to the integrity of SSA s disability programs In addition when investigating fraud in other SSA programs the Social Security Administration may request investigatory assistance from other law enforcement agencies including the Office of the Inspector General as well as state and local authorities 218 Restrictions on potentially deceptive communications Edit Because of the importance of Social Security to millions of Americans many direct mail marketers packaged their mailings to resemble official communications from the Social Security Administration hoping recipients would be more likely to open them In response Congress amended the Social Security Act in 1988 to prohibit the private use of the phrase Social Security and several related terms in any way that would convey a false impression of approval from the Social Security Administration The constitutionality of this law 42 U S C 1140 was upheld in United Seniors Association Inc v Social Security Administration 423 F 3d 397 4th Cir 2005 cert den 547 U S 1162 126 S Ct 2346 2006 text at Findlaw 219 Public economics EditCurrent recipients Edit Social Security Ratio of Covered Workers to Retirees The 2011 annual report by the program s Board of Trustees noted the following in 2010 54 million people were receiving Social Security benefits while 157 million people were paying into the fund of those receiving benefits 44 million were receiving retirement benefits and 10 million disability benefits In 2011 there will be 56 million beneficiaries and 158 million workers paying in In 2010 total income was 781 1 billion and expenditures were 712 5 billion which meant a total net increase in assets of 68 6 billion Assets in 2010 were 2 6 trillion an amount that is expected to be adequate to cover the next ten years In 2023 total income and interest earned on assets are projected to no longer cover expenditures for Social Security as demographic shifts burden the system By 2035 the ratio of potential retirees to working age persons will be 37 percent there will be less than three potential income earners for every retiree in the population At this rate the Social Security Trust Fund would be exhausted by 2036 220 Saving behavior Edit Social Security affects the saving behavior of the people in three different ways The wealth substitution effect occurs when a person saving for retirement recognizes that the Social Security system will take care of him and decreases his expectations about how much he needs to personally save The retirement effect occurs when a taxpayer saves more each year in an effort to reduce the total number of years he must work to accumulate enough savings before retirement The bequest effect occurs when a taxpayer recognizes a decrease in resources stemming from the Social Security tax and compensates by increasing personal savings to cover future expected costs of having children 221 Reducing cost of living adjustment COLA Edit At present a retiree s benefit is annually adjusted for inflation to reflect changes in the consumer price index 222 Some economists argue that the consumer price index overestimates price increases in the economy and therefore is not a suitable metric for adjusting benefits while others argue that the CPI underestimates the effect of inflation on what retired people actually need to buy to live The current cost of living adjustment is based on the consumer price index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers CPI W The Bureau of Labor Statistics routinely checks the prices of 211 different categories of consumption items in 38 geographical areas to compute 8 018 item area indices Many other indices are computed as weighted averages of these base indices CPI W is based on a market basket of goods and services consumed by urban wage earners and clerical workers The weights for that index are updated in January of every even numbered year People who say the CPI W overestimates inflation recommend updating the weights each month this produces the Chained Consumer Price Index for all urban consumers C CPI U People who say the C CPI U or the unchained CPI for All Urban Consumers CPI U disadvantages the elderly point out that seniors consume more medical care than younger people and that the costs of medical care have been rising faster than inflation in other parts of the economy According to this view the costs of the things the elderly buy have been rising faster than the market basket averaged to obtain CPI W CPI U or C CPI U Some have recommended fixing this by using a CPI for the Elderly CPI E In 2003 economics researchers Hobijn and Lagakos estimated that the social security trust fund would run out of money in 40 years using CPI W and in 35 years using CPI E 223 Consumption Edit According to a 2016 study in the American Economic Journal Macroeconomics the Social Security benefit increases from 1952 to 1991 have a large immediate and significant positive response of consumption 224 Health outcomes Edit According to a 2021 study the expansion of old age assistance under the 1935 Social Security Act reduced mortality among the elderly by 30 39 225 See also Edit United States portal Law portalList of Social Security lawsuits List of Social Security legislation United States 401 k Federal Emergency Relief Administration Financing and benefit structure Goldberg v Kelly Government operations Social Security Administration Carolyn W Colvin Acting Commissioner 2013 2017 Michael J Astrue Commissioner 2007 2013 Health savings account Individual retirement account National Organization of Social Security Claimants Representatives NOSSCR Ownership society Richardson v Perales Social Security debate United States Steward Machine Company v Davis Supplemental Security Income SSA impersonation scam Charitable contribution deductions in the United States Invalidity Old Age and Survivors Benefits Convention 1967References Edit Social Security Administration Social Insurance Programs retrieved 1 November 2016 Social Security Act of 1935 Legislative History 1935 Social Security Act Retrieved November 8 2006 42 USC 7 US Code Title 42 The Public Health and Welfare Archived from the original on October 12 2006 Retrieved November 8 2006 Social Security Monthly Statistical Snapshot November 2022 PDF Social Security Administration Research Statistics and Policy Analysis THE 2022 ANNUAL REPORT OF THE BOARD OF TRUSTEES OF THE FEDERAL OLD AGE AND SURVIVORS INSURANCE AND FEDERAL DISABILITY INSURANCE TRUST FUNDS PDF ssa gov Archived PDF from the original on September 1 2022 a b United States Social Security Administration Contribution and Benefit Base Social Security Who Is Covered Under the Program Congressional Research Service 42 USC 401 Trust Funds Retrieved November 8 2006 four Morton William R Liou Wayne September 12 2017 Social Security The Trust Funds PDF Washington DC Congressional Research Service Archived PDF from the original on December 5 2013 Retrieved October 16 2017 a b The 2012 Long Term Projections for Social Security Congressional Budget Office October 2012 a b c d THE 2020 ANNUAL REPORT OF THE BOARD OF TRUSTEES OF THE FEDERAL OLD AGE AND SURVIVORS INSURANCE AND FEDERAL DISABILITY INSURANCE TRUST FUNDS PDF ssa gov Archived PDF from the original on April 25 2020 Contribution and Benefit Base Social Security Administration November 2017 Retrieved November 30 2017 Social Security amp Medicare Tax Rates Social Security Administration Retrieved November 30 2017 Social Security History 1 accessed November 7 2013 Feldstein Martin Liebman Jeffrey B 2002 Chapter 32 Social security Social Security Handbook of Public Economics Vol 4 Elsevier pp 2245 2324 doi 10 1016 s1573 4420 02 80011 8 ISBN 9780444823151 Social Security FAQ 2 accessed February 2 2017 A Reader s Companion to American History Poverty Archived from the original on February 10 2006 Retrieved June 28 2016 Finance Business Economics Huge Old Age Reserve Fund Under Doughton Bill Gives Treasury Extensive New Financial Powers Could Be Used to Control Credit Also The Washington Post April 25 1935 p 23 The social security bill in its present form is thus not only a sweeping piece of legislation but also a far reaching financial measure To have investments available for such large reserve funds the Treasury will have to keep as much of its debt as possible in short dated maturities so that securities can be provided by the Old Age Reserve Account The existence of this huge reserve furthermore will constantly encourage resort to venture in State Socialism Albright Robert C June 15 1935 Security Bill s Passage Held Likely Monday Hastings and Long Assail Measure Few Changes Are Expected The Washington Post p 2 Senator Frederick Hale Republican Maine assailed the Social Security bill incidentally in the course of a speech in which he said President Roosevelt is filling Washington with socialistic agencies He said if Mr Roosevelt is renominated next year it will be unnecessary for the Socialist Party to put up a candidate Where the Line is Drawn From The Indianapolis News The New York Times February 16 1936 p E8 At this stage it is certain that no group of either party is going to fight all the achievements of the New Deal Its credit relief social security and such unemployment relief devices as the Civilian Conservation Corps are not likely to become the target for oratorical attack But its State socialism plans and its anti constitutional regimentation laws apparently will come in for an avalanche of opposition from groups of both parties Altman Nancy J August 14 2009 President Barack Obama could learn from 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of New York 9 5 1 6 Retrieved April 11 2013 Romer Christina D Romer David H October 1 2016 Transfer Payments and the Macroeconomy The Effects of Social Security Benefit Increases 1952 1991 American Economic Journal Macroeconomics 8 4 1 42 doi 10 1257 mac 20140348 ISSN 1945 7707 Galofre Vila Gregori McKee Martin Stuckler David March 2 2021 Quantifying the mortality impact of the 1935 old age assistance European Review of Economic History 26 62 77 doi 10 1093 ereh heab001 ISSN 1361 4916 Sources Edit Achenbaum Andrew 1986 Social Security Visions and Revisions Feldstein Martin Jeffrey Liebman editors 2002 The Distributional Aspects of Social Security and Social Security Reform Chicago University of Chicago Press Kessler Harris Alice 2001 In Pursuit of Equity Women Men and the Quest for Economic Citizenship in 20th Century America New York City Oxford University Press Social Security Administration Beneficiaries and costs information Wright Robert E 2010 Fubarnomics A Lighthearted Serious Look at America s Economic Ills Buffalo New York Prometheus Books Further reading EditAltman Nancy Kingson Eric Johnston David Cay 2015 Social Security Works Why Social Security Isn t Going Broke and How Expanding It Will Help Us All The New Press ISBN 1620970376 Achenbaum W Andrew 1986 Social Security Visions and Revisions 1986 a scholarly history of Social Security and retirement in the USA online Achenbaum W Andrew 1978 Old age in the new land The American experience since 1790 JHU Press 1978 online Berkowitz Edward and Kim McQuaid 1992 Creating the Welfare State The Political Economy of Twentieth Century Reform UP of Kansas 1992 Brown Jeffrey R Liebman Jeffrey B Wise David A 2009 Social Security Policy in a Changing Environment University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 226 07648 5 Davis Owen 2021 Employment and Retirement Among Older Workers During the COVID 19 Pandemic Schwartz Center for Economic Policy Analysis and Department of Economics The New School for Social Research Working Paper Series 6 2021 online Goda Gopi Shah et al 2022 The impact of Covid 19 on older workers employment and Social Security spillovers Journal of Population Economics 2022 1 34 online Jenkins Shirley et al eds Social Security in International Perspective Essays in Honor of Eveline M Burns Columbia University Press 1969 Kim Jin H 2019 Assessing The Adequacy Of Social Security Retirement Benefits Across Race Ethnicity Gender And Age Of Retirement Innovation in Aging 3 Suppl 1 2019 S890 Martin Patricia P Weaver David A 2005 Social Security A Program and Policy History 23 Social Security Bulletin Vol 66 No 1 2005 Myers Robert J Social Security University of Pennsylvania Press 1993 Saving Thomas R 2008 Social Security In David R Henderson ed Concise Encyclopedia of Economics 2nd ed Library of Economics and Liberty ISBN 978 0865976658 OCLC 237794267 Schieber Sylvester J and John B Shoven The Real Deal Yale University Press 1999 Casamatta G Cremer H amp Pestieau P 2000 The political economy of Social Security Scandinavian Journal of Economics 102 3 503 522 Cogan J F amp Mitchell O S 2003 Perspectives from the President s Commission on Social Security reform Journal of Economic Perspectives 17 2 149 172 Galasso V 1999 The U S Social Security system what does sustainability imply Review of Economic Dynamics 2 3 698 730 Galasso V amp Profeta P 2004 Lessons for an aging society the political sustainability of social security systems Economic Policy 19 38 63 115 Goss S C 2010 The future financial status of the Social Security program Social Security Bulletin 70 3 111 125 Pecchenino R A amp Utendorf K R 1999 Social Security social welfare and the aging population Journal of Population Economics 12 4 607 623 Ci Zhaoxue 2022 Does raising retirement age lead to a healthier transition to retirement Evidence from the US Social Security Amendments of 1983 Health Economics 2022 External links Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to Social Security United States Old Age Survivors and Disability Insurance OASDI Social Security Administration Social Security Advisory Board Social Security Retirement Questions FAQ Social Security Internet Myths part 1 Social Security Internet Myths part 2 Congressional Budget Office Social Security Primer 2001 US Government Accountability Office Social Security Reform Answers to Key Questions Social Security Act of 1935 Social Security Amendments of 1983 Calculators Social Security benefit calculators More information Commission to Strengthen Social Security Social Security Advisory Board President s Commission to Strengthen Social Security Social Security Death Index Information Articles Genakoplos John Mitchell Olivia S Zeldes Stephen P 1998 Would a Privatized Social Security System Really Pay a Higher Rate of Return In Arnold R Douglas Graetz Michael J Munnell Alicia H eds Framing the Social Security Debate Values Politics and Economics Brookings Institution Press pp 137 156 doi 10 3386 w6713 ISBN 0 8157 0153 5 Social Security Major Decisions in the House and Senate Since 1935 Congressional Research Service 2016 Social Security s Financial Outlook and Reforms An Independent Evaluation Jagadeesh Gokhale member of the Social Security Advisory Board advising Congress and the President Time Archives A Collection regarding Social Security s progression and perception over time Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Social Security United States amp oldid 1144265591, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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